White Women, Race Matters: The Social Construction of WhitenessU of Minnesota Press, 1993 - 289 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página 3
... question . " The issue was anything but trivial to us . For one thing , it was startling in its implication that we were about to lose our newly found grip on the reins of liberation . ( My friends and I were mostly socialist feminists ...
... question . " The issue was anything but trivial to us . For one thing , it was startling in its implication that we were about to lose our newly found grip on the reins of liberation . ( My friends and I were mostly socialist feminists ...
Página 4
... questions for me were : How did this happen ? How did we get into this mess ? What do " they " mean when they tell us white feminism is racist ? Trans- lated into research , the same questions looked something like this : ( How ) does ...
... questions for me were : How did this happen ? How did we get into this mess ? What do " they " mean when they tell us white feminism is racist ? Trans- lated into research , the same questions looked something like this : ( How ) does ...
Página 12
... questions about race and identity in relation to Chicanas and Chicanos as often as to African American men and women . In this book , I define race difference in a way that is avowedly historically specific , politically engaged , and ...
... questions about race and identity in relation to Chicanas and Chicanos as often as to African American men and women . In this book , I define race difference in a way that is avowedly historically specific , politically engaged , and ...
Página 14
... question here is why , given these origins , by the mid- 1970s the most clearly audible feminist discourses were those that failed to address racism . The answer to that question is lengthy and beyond the scope of this book , although ...
... question here is why , given these origins , by the mid- 1970s the most clearly audible feminist discourses were those that failed to address racism . The answer to that question is lengthy and beyond the scope of this book , although ...
Página 20
... question certain elements of " popular wis- dom . " These interviews did not , for example , suggest that one experience of marginality — Jewishness , lesbianism — led white women automatically toward empathy with other oppressed ...
... question certain elements of " popular wis- dom . " These interviews did not , for example , suggest that one experience of marginality — Jewishness , lesbianism — led white women automatically toward empathy with other oppressed ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
White Women, Race Matters: The Social Construction of Whiteness Ruth Frankenberg Sin vista previa disponible - 1993 |
White Women, Race Matters: The Social Construction of Whiteness Ruth Frankenberg Sin vista previa disponible - 1993 |
White Women, Race Matters: The Social Construction of Whiteness Ruth Frankenberg Sin vista previa disponible - 1993 |
Términos y frases comunes
African American anti-Semitism antiracism antiracist argued articulated Beth Beth's Black California Cathy Cathy's chapter Chela Sandoval Chicano childhood Chris consciously constructed context cultural difference cultural practices Debby described discursive repertoires domestic workers dominant Donna dualistic environment essentialist racism ethnic evasion Evelyn example experience father feel felt feminism Frieda friends gender Ginny Gloria Anzaldúa grew high school husband identity interracial couples interracial relationships Irene Italian American Jeanine Jewish Latino lesbian linked married means Mexican Mexican American middle-class Minnie Bruce Pratt modes mother moved multiracial narratives Native American neighborhood normative parents partner political question race cognizance race difference race privilege racial order racially mixed relation Sandy Alvarez Santa Cruz County sense sexual shaped social structure Suzie Suzie's talk things thinking through race United white culture white feminists white women woman women I interviewed women of color working-class
Pasajes populares
Página 240 - The starting-point of critical elaboration is the consciousness of what one really is, and is 'knowing thyself as a product of the historical process to date, which has deposited in you an infinity of traces, without leaving an inventory.
Página 269 - David R. Roediger, The Wages of Whiteness: Race and the Making of the American Working Class (London: Verso, 1991); Noel Ignatiev, How the Irish Became White...
Página 1 - First, o 1 o whiteness is a location of structural advantage, of race privilege. Second, it is a "standpoint," a place from which white people look at ourselves , at others , and at society. ' Third, "whiteness" refers to a set of cultural practices that are usually unmarked and unnamed.
Página 6 - Whiteness refers to a set of locations that are historically, socially, politically, and culturally produced and moreover are intrinsically linked to unfolding relations of domination. Naming 'whiteness' displaces it from the unmarked, unnamed status that is itself an effect of its dominance. Among the effects on white people both of race privilege and of the dominance of whiteness are their seeming normativity, their structured invisibility
Página 147 - is good only insofar as their [people of color] 'coloredness' can be bracketed and ignored, and this bracketing is contingent on the ability or the decision— in fact, the virtue — of a 'noncolored'— or white— self. Color-blindness, despite the best intentions of its adherents, in this sense preserves the power structure inherent in essentialist...
Página 1 - In the same way that both men's and women's lives are shaped by their gender, and that both heterosexual and lesbian women's experiences in the world are marked by their sexuality, white people and people of color live racially structured lives. In other words, any system of differentiation shapes those on whom it bestows privilege as well as those it oppresses. White people are "raced,