This paper introduces the concept of the ‘rationalizing/racializing logic of capital’ as a new form of racial governance. This is most evident in cultural production, where the techniques of rationalization - and in particular, the uses of data - that characterize media industry practices produces racializing effects, transforming the potentially disruptive texts of minority producers into absolute ethnic difference. To illustrate this the article presents an empirical study into the experiences of British South Asian authors in the publishing industry. It focuses on the use of a point-of-sale technology called BookScan, which, it is shown, is the means through which Asian authors come to be pigeon-holed by their ethnicity, and subsequently...
Racism is not a natural phenomenon. Historically, it was socialised into global existence through in...
How do cultural and creative workers respond to racism and the politics of representation and respec...
In this thesis, I ask ‘Do racism and anti-racism affect black middle-class cultural lives?’ I answer...
Studies of race and media are dominated by textual approaches that explore the politics of represent...
This article is a critical account of how diversity is understood and mobilized within cultural indu...
This article demonstrates the ambivalence of diversity in the cultural industries, and racial capita...
This article demonstrates the ambivalence of diversity in the cultural industries, and racial capita...
This chapter reflects upon the growing body of race and production studies that explores the dynamic...
This article seeks to develop an approach to cultural production which takes racism seriously. We su...
‘Diversity’ is an evolving dimension of discursive debates within publicly funded parts of the UK m...
This article has two aims. Firstly, it challenges the assumption in both policy and media studies of...
The conversation in book publishing has established that the industry is remarkably, well, white. We...
Within popular culture in the West, stereotypical representations of ‘race’ still persist. This is p...
Within popular culture in the West, stereotypical representations of ‘race’ still persist. This is p...
Drawing upon 38 qualitative interviews with Black and South Asian middle-class individuals we theori...
Racism is not a natural phenomenon. Historically, it was socialised into global existence through in...
How do cultural and creative workers respond to racism and the politics of representation and respec...
In this thesis, I ask ‘Do racism and anti-racism affect black middle-class cultural lives?’ I answer...
Studies of race and media are dominated by textual approaches that explore the politics of represent...
This article is a critical account of how diversity is understood and mobilized within cultural indu...
This article demonstrates the ambivalence of diversity in the cultural industries, and racial capita...
This article demonstrates the ambivalence of diversity in the cultural industries, and racial capita...
This chapter reflects upon the growing body of race and production studies that explores the dynamic...
This article seeks to develop an approach to cultural production which takes racism seriously. We su...
‘Diversity’ is an evolving dimension of discursive debates within publicly funded parts of the UK m...
This article has two aims. Firstly, it challenges the assumption in both policy and media studies of...
The conversation in book publishing has established that the industry is remarkably, well, white. We...
Within popular culture in the West, stereotypical representations of ‘race’ still persist. This is p...
Within popular culture in the West, stereotypical representations of ‘race’ still persist. This is p...
Drawing upon 38 qualitative interviews with Black and South Asian middle-class individuals we theori...
Racism is not a natural phenomenon. Historically, it was socialised into global existence through in...
How do cultural and creative workers respond to racism and the politics of representation and respec...
In this thesis, I ask ‘Do racism and anti-racism affect black middle-class cultural lives?’ I answer...