Unsettling Settler Societies
Articulations of Gender, Race, Ethnicity and Class
Edited by:
- Daiva Stasiulis - Carleton University, Canada
- Nira Yuval-Davis - University of East London, UK
Volume:
11
August 2012 | 352 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
What relationship exists between indigenous and settler/immigrant populations? This fascinating volume answers this question by examining societies where Europeans have settled and become politically dominant over indigenous people-and where a heterogeneous society has developed in class, ethnic, and racial terms. A distinguished cast of contributors explores the racial and ethnic cleavages of such societies and invites comparison with a variety of contemporary societies that have involved encounters between native and migrant groups. In all the case studies discussed (New Zealand, Australia, Zimbabwe, Algeria, Israel, the United States, Mexico, Peru, Canada, and South Africa), special attention is paid to the role of gender.
For scholars and students in the fields of gender studies, race and ethnic studies, sociology, and political theory, this book is a must.
John H Stanfield II
Foreword
Daiva Stasiulis and Nira Yuval-Davis
Introduction
Wendy Larner and Paul Spoonley
Post-Colonial Politics in Aotearoa/New Zealand
Jan Jindy Pettman
Race, Ethnicity and Gender in Australia
Daiva Stasiulis and Radha Jhappan
The Fractious Politics of a Settler Society
Dolores Janiewski
Gendering, Racializing and Classifying
Natividad Guti[ac]errez
Miscegenation as Nation-Building
Sarah A Radcliffe
Five Centuries of Gendered Settler Society
Elaine Unterhalter
Constructing Race, Class, Gender and Ethnicity
Susie Jacobs
Gender Divisions and the Formation of Ethnicities in Zimbabwe
Anissa H[ac]elie
Between `Becoming M'tourni' and `Going Native'
Nahla Abdo and Nira Yuval-Davis
Palestine, Israel and the Zionist Settler Project