Whiteness and Racialized Ethnic Groups in the United States

The Politics of Remembering

By (author) Sherrow O. Pinder

Publication date:

16 December 2011

Length of book:

218 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

Dimensions:

241x162mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9780739164891


Whiteness and Racialized Ethnic Groups in the United States, in order to account for the never ending discrimination toward racialized ethnic groups including First Nations, blacks, Chinese, and Mexicans, revisits the history of whiteness in the United States. It shows the difference between remembering a history of human indignities and recreating one that composes its own textual memory. More specifically, it reformulates how the historically reliant positionality of whiteness, as a part of the everyday practice and discourse of white supremacy, would later become institutionalized. Even though “whiteness studies,” with the intention of exposing white privilege, has entered the realm of academic research and is moving toward antiracist forms of whiteness or, at least, toward antiracist approaches for a different form of whiteness, it is not equipped to relinquish the privilege that comes with normalized whiteness. Hence, in order to construct a post white identity, whiteness would have to be denormalized and freed of it of its presumptive hegemony.
Whiteness and Racialized Ethnic Groups in the United States is the logical follow up of Pinder’s intellectual journey. Her scholarly style and lucid argumentation are fascinating. . . . Having taught Pinder in an upper level under-graduate Africana Studies class I can say that this book can be taught in undergraduate and graduate courses, including Africana Studies, Political Science, Multicultural and Gender Studies.