Whiteness
The Communication of Social Identity
Edited by:
November 1998 | 328 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
Whiteness is a collection of outstanding essays that employs a range of approaches to understanding whiteness a communication phenomenon. Contributors use analyses of media representations, social scientific data, poststructuralist theoretical discussions, and post-colonial critiques of whiteness. Included as well are discussions of some of the ways whiteness is enacted through commemorations, white antiracist rhetoric, pedagogy, and personal narratives that highlight the cultural politics of whiteness. Thomas K. Nakayama and Judith N. Martin conclude with specific claims out white identity and about the ways multi-methodological approaches to communication offer new insights into research.
Both timely and intriguing, this collection of articles will further our understanding of intercultural communication.
Thomas K Nakayama and Judith N Martin
Introduction
Parker C Johnson
Reflections on Critical White(ness) Studies
PART ONE: FOUNDATIONS OF WHITENESS
Philip C Wander, Judith Martin and Thomas Nakayama
Whiteness and Beyond
Judith N Martin et al
What Do White People Want to Be Called? A Study of Self-Labels for White Americans
Debian Marty
White Anti-Racist Rhetoric as Apologia
Christina W Stage
We Celebrate 100 years
PART TWO: POSTCOLONIAL AND POSTSTRUCTURALIST VIEWS ON WHITENESS
Thomas K Nakayama and Robert L Krizek
Whiteness as a Strategic Rhetoric
Raka Shome
Whiteness and the Politics of Location
K E Supriya
White Difference
Sarah Projansky and Kent A Ono
Strategic Whiteness as Cinematic Racial Politics
PART THREE: WHITENESS IN U.S. CONTEXTS
Dreama Moon
White Enculturation and Bourgeois Ideology
Jolanta A Drzewiecka and Kathleen Wong (Lau)
The Dynamic Construction of White Ethnicity in the Context of Transnational Cultural Formations
Kevin DeLuca
In the Shadow of Whiteness
PART FOUR: WHITENESS IN INTERNATIONAL CONTEXTS
Priya Kapoor
Provincializing Whiteness
Melissa Steyn
White Identity in Context
Wen shu Lee
One Whiteness Veils Three Uglinesses
". . .encourages the reader to consider different definitions of whiteness. . .a worthwhile addition to the literature on communication."
Humboldt State University, California