Whiteness in America isn’t just the neutral norm against which racial minorities, particularly Black people, are measured. Whiteness in America means having the privilege and power that go along with being part of that supposed norm. And becoming white – not in terms of pigment but of social status – is a choice that nearly every immigrant or refugee group in America has had to embrace or reject. We talk with two scholars in the field of Whiteness Studies about how understanding the construction of white identity in this polyglot country gives us keen insights into its troubled racial history
No longer content with accepting whiteness as the norm, critical scholars have turned their attentio...
This paper explores the extent to which whiteness is represented in the Fall 2016 issue of Brevity. ...
The value of research that draws from both ethnomethodology and poststructural discourse analysis ha...
Despite the prevailing national discourse that implicates race as an outdated phenomenon, ongoing so...
This thesis explores the concept of white identity as seen in literary works in four time periods: R...
Critical Whiteness studies has emerged as an academic discipline that has produced a lot of work and...
Part of a collaborative commission between the National Humanities Alliance, the Federation of State...
Despite claims of a post-racial society, racism is still alive and well in America and whiteness rem...
The ways in which white Americans understand the racial landscape and their own racial identities ar...
George Lipsitz has sculpted a set of essays into a masterful volume that engages the critical questi...
Informed by major themes from Whiteness Studies such as white privilege, invisibility, and colorblin...
Recent studies on the demographics of the United States show a dramatic shift in the amount of non-H...
In The History of White People, historian Nell Painter wrote, “Being White these days isn’t what it ...
A prominent aspect of whiteness has always been and continues to be a matter of White people’s comfo...
Whiteness is a social location of power, privilege, and prestige. It is a “an invisible package of u...
No longer content with accepting whiteness as the norm, critical scholars have turned their attentio...
This paper explores the extent to which whiteness is represented in the Fall 2016 issue of Brevity. ...
The value of research that draws from both ethnomethodology and poststructural discourse analysis ha...
Despite the prevailing national discourse that implicates race as an outdated phenomenon, ongoing so...
This thesis explores the concept of white identity as seen in literary works in four time periods: R...
Critical Whiteness studies has emerged as an academic discipline that has produced a lot of work and...
Part of a collaborative commission between the National Humanities Alliance, the Federation of State...
Despite claims of a post-racial society, racism is still alive and well in America and whiteness rem...
The ways in which white Americans understand the racial landscape and their own racial identities ar...
George Lipsitz has sculpted a set of essays into a masterful volume that engages the critical questi...
Informed by major themes from Whiteness Studies such as white privilege, invisibility, and colorblin...
Recent studies on the demographics of the United States show a dramatic shift in the amount of non-H...
In The History of White People, historian Nell Painter wrote, “Being White these days isn’t what it ...
A prominent aspect of whiteness has always been and continues to be a matter of White people’s comfo...
Whiteness is a social location of power, privilege, and prestige. It is a “an invisible package of u...
No longer content with accepting whiteness as the norm, critical scholars have turned their attentio...
This paper explores the extent to which whiteness is represented in the Fall 2016 issue of Brevity. ...
The value of research that draws from both ethnomethodology and poststructural discourse analysis ha...