Deconstructing Dominant Discourses Across Disciplines
Buch, Englisch, 1367 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 2689 g
ISBN: 978-981-97-5084-9
Verlag: Springer Nature Singapore
This timely handbook responds to the international drive to know more about Whiteness – its origins, its impacts and, importantly, the means for diffusing it. Guided by critical Whiteness theory, the volume deconstructs, decodes and disrupts Whiteness as it is constructed and employed in contemporary and diverse contexts. To do so, the international contributors discuss and critique the role of 21st-century Whiteness across a range of professions and disciplines relevant to the needs of contemporary global citizens. Failure to deconstruct Whiteness as an ideology and the power structure underlying national and global racial inequalities undermines the efforts to improve social, health and economic outcomes for societies and nations on a grand scale.
The handbook is comprehensive in its nature and contents, with 10 themed parts ranging from a more disciplinary-based approach, theoretical frameworks, and methodological frameworks, to different aspects of decolonized approaches to social, health, political and economic well-being. It navigates how various disciplines respond to the pervasive and persuasive nature of Whiteness in their operational settings, across individual, professional, organisational and systemic levels. The volume is unique in its dual focus on deconstructing Whiteness and providing examples and recommendations on how diverse groups seek to decolonize their communities and people through action. Examples and recommendations are discussed with particular focus on: 1) the interconnection between integrating indigenous and diverse knowledges and perspectives in deconstructing Whiteness; 2) the urgency for critical Whiteness discourse, dialogue and professional development across disciplines; and 3) institutional accountability to decolonisation and anti-racism. Considering the ongoing marginalization and institutional racism directed at non-White individuals and communities and the rise of White supremacy movements, critical Whiteness pedagogy and research is more important than ever.
is an essential resource for students, educators, academics, researchers, higher education administrators, practitioners, policy-makers, organisational leaders, government stakeholders, and other professionals in social sciences, medicine, STEM, allied/global/public health, legal and political disciplines, and health and social care institutions. It especially engages those interested in decolonisation, critical race theory, critical Whiteness theory, critical multiculturalism, social justice, anti-racism and Indigenous knowledges.
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Sozialwissenschaften Ethnologie | Volkskunde Volkskunde Minderheiten, Interkulturelle & Multikulturelle Fragen
- Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie | Soziale Arbeit Soziale Gruppen/Soziale Themen Soziale Gruppen & Klassen
- Geisteswissenschaften Geschichtswissenschaft Geschichtliche Themen Kolonialgeschichte, Geschichte des Imperialismus
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction to the Handbook.- Critical Whiteness: Why Does It Matter.- Key Concepts in Critical Whiteness Studies.- The Influence and Impact of Whiteness Across Decolonial Theory and Practices.- How Intergenerational Cycles of White Ignorance and Incapacity Perpetuate Indigenous Inequality.- Musical Color Lines: Deconstructing Racial Categories in the Culture of the United States.- The Lived Experience of Whiteness.- Critical Whiteness in Academia.- Choosing Marginality: Seeing Beauty in Defiant and Antiracist Scholarship.- Recruitment and Retention of Faculty and Students of Color in Higher Education.- Racism in Academia.- A Paradigmatic Shift in Anti-racist Social Work Practice: An Example from Australian Tertiary Education.- Racial and Cultural Passing in the Academy.- Resistance, White Fragility, and Fear of the Unknown in Tertiary Settings: A Recipe for Blak Fatigue.- Critical Reflections on Blackness/Blakness and the Whiteness of Coloniality in the Pacific.- Indigenizing Critical whiteness: Deconstruction of Va-Relational Practices in Aotearoa-New Zealand University Settings.- Australian Universities, Indigenization, Whiteness, and Settler Colonial Epistemic Violence.- Critical Whiteness in Education.- Continuing To Address Whiteness Behaviours Through Culturally Responsive Practice.- The Maintenance of the Dominance of Whiteness in Australian Social Work.- “What’s in a Name”: An “Asian” Australian Educator’s Autoethnographic Account of Critical Pedagogical Practice that Deconstructs Whiteness in Teacher.- Education Spaces.- Navigating Whiteness in Education: A Pasifika Perspective.- Don’t Get It Twisted: How Whiteness Rhetoric Obscures Teacher Education.- The Representation of Whiteness in Malta and Maltese Education.- Critical Whiteness in Criminal Justice Systems.- Whiteness in Corrections: Examining the Disproportionate System of Contact of Black Individuals Across the Lifespan.- Whiteness in Criminology: Indigenous Overrepresentation.- Carceral Logics of Colonialism.