Cities of WhitenessISBN: 978-1-4051-2913-8
Hardcover
232 pages
November 2007, Wiley-Blackwell
Other Available Formats: Paperback
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"Shaw does a fascinating job combining the literature on urban transformation with whiteness studies and creating a unique reading of Sydney as a space of white privilege … .The book is well researched and tells a fascinating story of racialized urban change." (Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, December 2008)
“Cities of Whiteness is an important contribution to
our understanding of how race works in the postmodern city. It
shows in clear and convincing detail how whiteness is bound up with
property, heritage and fear.”
–Alastair Bonnett, Newcastle University
“Wendy S. Shaw writes with passion, with political commitment, carefully and engagingly, and with the kind of gallows humour that can be expected in grim situations. Her subtle and always empirically-grounded analysis astutely picks at the invisible structures of racialization that underpin white privilege and power. Sydney and New York, after Cities of Whiteness, are not such virtuous cities of multiculturalism. Instead, we see these cities afresh, complete with their promiscuous and particular processes of white superiority.”
–Steve Pile, The Open University
–Alastair Bonnett, Newcastle University
“Wendy S. Shaw writes with passion, with political commitment, carefully and engagingly, and with the kind of gallows humour that can be expected in grim situations. Her subtle and always empirically-grounded analysis astutely picks at the invisible structures of racialization that underpin white privilege and power. Sydney and New York, after Cities of Whiteness, are not such virtuous cities of multiculturalism. Instead, we see these cities afresh, complete with their promiscuous and particular processes of white superiority.”
–Steve Pile, The Open University