A Companion to Racial and Ethnic StudiesISBN: 978-0-631-20616-3
Hardcover
628 pages
February 2002, Wiley-Blackwell
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Preface.
General Introduction: David Theo Goldberg and John Solomos.
Part I: History:.
Introduction.
1. Europe and its Others: Jan Nederveen Pieterse (Institute of Social Studies, the Netherlands).
2. Doctrine of Discovery: Peter Fitzpatrick (Birkbeck College, University of London).
3. Genocide: Charles Briggs (University of California, San Diego).
4. Holocaust: Zygmunt Bauman (University of Leeds).
5. Antisemitism: Tony Kushner (University of Southampton).
6. Apartheid and Race: Deborah Posel (Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research (WISER), University of Witwatersrand).
Part II: Theory:.
Introduction.
7. Race Relations: Michael Banton (University of Bristol).
8. Ethnicity and Race: Werner Sollors (Harvard University).
9. The Parameters of 'White Critique': Vron Ware (Yale University).
10. Citizenship: Marco Martiniello (National Fund for Scientific Research (FNRS), Centre d'Etudes de l'Ethnicite et des Migrations (CEDEM), University of Liege).
11. Multiculturalism: Stephen May (University of Bristol).
12. Discourse and Racism: Teun A. van Dijk (University of Amsterdam and Visiting Professor at Universidad Tat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona).
13. Critical Race Feminism: Legal Reform for the Twenty-First Century: Adrien Katherine Wing (University of Iowa).
14. Psychoanalysis and Racism: Reading the Other Scene: Phil Cohen (University of East London).
15. Everyday Racism: Philomena Essed (University of Amsterdam and Visiting Professor at the University of California, Irvine).
16. Science, Race, Culture, Empire: Sandra Harding (UCLA).
Part III: Political Economy:.
Introduction.
17. Racial States: David Theo Goldberg (University of California Humanities Research Institute and University of California, Irvine).
18. Racisms and Racialised Hostility at the Start of the New Millennium: Stephen Small (University of California, Berkeley).
19. Affirmative Action as Culture War: Jennifer Hochschild (Princeton University).
20. Racism, Politics and Mobilization: John Solomos (South Bank University) and Lisa Schuster (London School of Economics, University of London).
Part IV: Space:.
Introduction.
21. The Mirage at the Heart of the Myth? Thinking about the White City: Michael Keith (Goldsmiths College, University of London).
22. The Ghetto and Race: Robert Bernasconi (University of Memphis).
23. Residential Segregation: Douglas S. Massey (University of Pennsylvania).
24. New Languages, New Humanities: The "Mixed Race" Narrative and the Borderlands: Claudia Milian (Recent PHD Graduate at Brown University).
25. The New Technologies of Racism: Les Back (Goldsmiths College, University of London).
Part V: Culture:.
Introduction.
26. Public Intellectuals, Race and Public Space: Henry Giroux (Penn State University).
27. Sport as Contsted Terrain: Douglas Hartmann (University of Minnesota, Twin Cities).
28. Fashion: Gargi Bhattacharyya (University of Birmingham).
29. Black Art: The Constitution of a Contemporary African-American Visual Identity: Elvan Zabunyan (Universite in Rennes, Brittany).
30. The Fact of Hybridity: Youth, Ethnicity and Racism: Les Back (Goldsmiths College, University of London).
Part VI: Between Borders:.
Introduction.
31. The Development of Racism in Europe: Michel Wieviorka (Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales and Centre D'Analyse et d'Intervention Sociologiques (CADIS), Paris).
32. The Caribbean: Race and Creole Ethnicity: Percy C. Hintzen (University of California, Berkeley).
33. Race in China: Frand Dikotter (University of London).
34. Globalism, Postcolonialism and African Studies: Bill Ashcroft (New South Wales University, Sydney).
35. The Salience of Ethnoreligious Identities in the Middle East: An Interpretation: Pandeli Glavanis (University of Northumbria, Newcastle upon Tyne).
36. Critical Race Studies in Latin America: Recent Advances, Recurrent Weaknesses: Jonathon W. Warren (University of Washington, Seattle) and France Winddance Twine (University of Calfornia at Santa Barbara and University of Washington in Seattle).
37. Migration: Stephen Castles (Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford).
Index.