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EbookBell Team
4.3
68 reviews
ISBN 10: 0230618855
ISBN 13: 9780230618855
Author: Leigh Boucher, Jane Carey, Katherine Ellinghaus
This book brings together historians from the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Europe to historicize constructions of whiteness as a colonial formation. Confronting the privilege inherent in the invisibility of contemporary whiteness requires that the historical roots of racial power be interrogated, and the history of European colonialism is of much more than passing significance to this task. This collection functions to read the colonial back into whiteness by demonstrating how this racial category traveled around the routes of empire. It shows how a transnational focus can bring historical and spatial specificity to the study of whiteness and thus re-orients the frames of whiteness for American and non-American scholars alike.
1 Re-Orienting Whiteness: A New Agenda for the Field
Part I: Historians Approaching the Study of Whiteness
2 Whiteness and “the Imperial Turn”
3 The Strange Career of Whiteness: Miscegenation, Assimilation, Abdication
4 “Whiteness,” Geopolitical Reconfiguration, and the Settler Empire in Nineteenth-Century Victor
Part II: Whiteness as a Transnational Colonial Production
5 Traveling White
6 The Question of Miscegenation in the Politics of English-Speaking Countries in the Early Twentieth
7 “Being Thankful for their Birth in a Christian Land”: Interrogating Intersections between Whit
8 “I Followed England Round the World”: The Rise of Trans-Imperial Anglo-Saxon Exceptionalism, a
Part III: Whiteness as a Settler-Colonial Identity
9 White is Wonderful: Emotional Conversion and Subjective Formation
10 The Fabrication of White Homemaking: Louisa Meredith in Colonial Tasmania
11 Reading the Shadows of Whiteness: A Case of Racial Clarity on Queensland’s Colonial Borderlands
12 The Deluded White Woman and the Expatriation of the White Child
Part IV: Whiteness and the Imagining/Managing of Colonial Populations
13 “Women’s Objective—A Perfect Race”: Whiteness, Eugenics, and the Articulation of Race
14 “Born and Nurtured in Darkest Ignorance”: White Imaginings of Aboriginal Maternity
15 Rethinking “Squaw Men” and “Pakeha-Maori”: Legislating White Masculinity in New Zealand a
16 Into the White Man’s Kingdom: Whiteness and Indigenous Assimilation Policies in the United Stat
Part V: Conclusion
17 Epilogue
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Tags: Leigh Boucher, Jane Carey, Katherine Ellinghaus, Whiteness