Copyright © 2004 Palgrave Macmillan LtdIn this paper, we focus on the ways in which subjective investments in whiteness work to construct Indigenous people as threats to the white Australian nation. In order to better understand such subjective investments, we employ an approach to analysing talk that draws upon both psychoanalysis and discursive psychology. We suggest that this combination may allow for a thoroughly social understanding of the practices of exclusion within Australia. Through an analysis of white participants talk surrounding Indigenous land claims, we demonstrate the "anxieties of whiteness" that structure the hegemonic intelligible subject positions available to white Australians, particularly within the current political...
Much analysis of race in Australia focuses on ‘racist’ ideas and individuals. This group is often un...
This research investigates how White capacity for constructive race relations is perceived from an I...
Whiteness in its dominant contemporary form in Australian society is Anglocised, institutionalised a...
Research on racism in Australia by white psychologists is often fraught with tensions surrounding a)...
This paper critically examines the way that whiteness impedes a non-colonial present between many wh...
Beginning in the 1970s, the efforts of the Australian settler state to help its Indigenous minority ...
The aim of this paper is to explore how examining discourses of whiteness can contribute to an anti-...
The present study offers a critique of white psychologists ’ writings on race relations in Australia...
The focus of this essay is the racialised political emotions of \u27good white people\u27. I examine...
Published in Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, 2005; 15 (6):461-477 at www.interscie...
Whiteness Studies in Australia arguably began as a reflection on the worry, concern and fear of ordi...
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution lice...
In his analysis of 'paranoid nationalism', Hage (2003: xii, 2) coins the figure of the 'white worrie...
This article investigates how unacknowledged power can affect the political actions of those in the ...
This paper offers the historical context and a conceptual framework to understand how race has shape...
Much analysis of race in Australia focuses on ‘racist’ ideas and individuals. This group is often un...
This research investigates how White capacity for constructive race relations is perceived from an I...
Whiteness in its dominant contemporary form in Australian society is Anglocised, institutionalised a...
Research on racism in Australia by white psychologists is often fraught with tensions surrounding a)...
This paper critically examines the way that whiteness impedes a non-colonial present between many wh...
Beginning in the 1970s, the efforts of the Australian settler state to help its Indigenous minority ...
The aim of this paper is to explore how examining discourses of whiteness can contribute to an anti-...
The present study offers a critique of white psychologists ’ writings on race relations in Australia...
The focus of this essay is the racialised political emotions of \u27good white people\u27. I examine...
Published in Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, 2005; 15 (6):461-477 at www.interscie...
Whiteness Studies in Australia arguably began as a reflection on the worry, concern and fear of ordi...
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution lice...
In his analysis of 'paranoid nationalism', Hage (2003: xii, 2) coins the figure of the 'white worrie...
This article investigates how unacknowledged power can affect the political actions of those in the ...
This paper offers the historical context and a conceptual framework to understand how race has shape...
Much analysis of race in Australia focuses on ‘racist’ ideas and individuals. This group is often un...
This research investigates how White capacity for constructive race relations is perceived from an I...
Whiteness in its dominant contemporary form in Australian society is Anglocised, institutionalised a...