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Books > Social sciences > Sociology, social studies > Ethnic studies > Multicultural studies > General
Soon after the September 11th attacks, a number of Sikh men were targeted and killed; mistaken as Muslims. Such hate crimes are only a new twist on what has become a familiar story. Children at a Jewish daycare centre in California were attacked by an anti-Semitic gunman. In Texas, a black man was dragged to death from the back of a pick-up truck. And, of course, we all remember the brutal murder of Matthew Shepperd, a young gay man from Montana. All are cases of hate crimes. Whether motivated by race, gender, religion, ethnicity, or sexuality, hate crimes happen every day and in every state across the country. Hate and Bias Crime: A Reader is the first reader to bring together the essential readings on hate and bias crime, its causes and consequences, victims, hate groups and interventions.
This innovative volume brings a selection of leading political theorists to the wide-ranging debate on multiculturalism and political legitimacy. By focusing on the challenge to mainstream liberal theory posed by the surge of interest in the rights of minority groups and subcultures within states, the authors confront issues such as rights, liberalism, cultural pluralism and power relations.
Asian America.Net demonstrates how Asian Americans have both defined and been defined by electronic technology. From 'model minority' stereotypes in the software industry to the "techno-orientalism" of computer games, these associations weigh heavily on contemporary discourses of race, ethnicity, gender, and technology. The thirteen essays gathered here critically examine the intersections of these discourses in mainstream media including novels and film, in alternative currents such as chat rooms and comic books, and in 'real life'. A landmark contribution to the study of cyberculture, Asian America.Net illuminates the complex networks of identity, community, and history in the digital age.
Asian America.Net demonstrates how Asian Americans have both defined and been defined by electronic technology. From 'model minority' stereotypes in the software industry to the "techno-orientalism" of computer games, these associations weigh heavily on contemporary discourses of race, ethnicity, gender, and technology. The thirteen essays gathered here critically examine the intersections of these discourses in mainstream media including novels and film, in alternative currents such as chat rooms and comic books, and in 'real life'. A landmark contribution to the study of cyberculture, Asian America.Net illuminates the complex networks of identity, community, and history in the digital age.
This innovative collection of essays explores the ways in which islands have been used, imagined and theorised, both by island dwellers and continentals. This study considers how island dwellers conceived of themselves and their relation to proximate mainlands, and examines the fascination that islands have long held in the European imagination. The collection addresses the significance of islands in the Atlantic economy of the eighteenth century, the exploration of the Pacific, the important role played by islands in the process of decolonisation, and island-oriented developments in postcolonial writing. Islands were often seen as natural colonies or settings for ideal communities but they were also used as dumping grounds for the unwanted, a practice which has continued into the twentieth century. The collection argues the need for an island-based theory within postcolonial studies and suggests how this might be constructed. Covering a historical span from the eighteenth to the twentieth century, the contributors include literary and postcolonial critics, historians and geographers.
This book is the first comprehensive study of politics,
participation and civic engagement in Pakistani Muslim communities
in the UK. Written from an insider perspective, "British Muslim
Politics," offers a unique take on a demographic group that has
been the subject of much public and policy concern in recent times.
Arguing for a critical reappraisal of our views of 'Muslim'
politics, the book takes a panoramic view of a decade that has seen
many significant events shape the political practices of Pakistani
Muslims in the UK (from the 2001 summer riots, to 9/11, to 7/7).
For over a decade the author has been embedded as a researcher in
the Pakistani community and has thus had access to people, places,
narratives and stories that allow her to provide a comprehensive
account of political processes affecting this community. British
Muslim Politics is a refreshing look at how religion, ethnicity,
people, and place shape contemporary politics.
Urban landscapes are complex spaces of sociocultural diversity,
characterized by narratives of both conviviality and conflict. As
people with multiple ethnicities and nationalities find their
common destinies in thriving globalizing cities, social
cohesiveness becomes more precarious as different beliefs,
practices, ambitions, values, and affiliations intersect in close
proximity, producing social tensions. Tensions in Diversity
presents a multi-method comparative study that draws on the
experiences of 140 residents of native and immigrant origin,
community organizers, and municipal officers in three culturally
diverse neighbourhoods of varying income levels in Los Angeles
County. Using cognitive mapping analysis combined with data from
interviews, surveys, and participant observation, this book
explores how exactly coexistence is socio-spatially experienced and
negotiated in daily life. Tensions in Diversity identifies the
planning and design considerations that enable intercultural
learning in the public places within diverse cities. In doing so,
this book foregrounds urban space as an active force in shaping
coexistence and convivial public environments.
Museum Development and Cultural Representation critically examines
the development of a museum and cultural heritage centre in the
indigenous Kelabit Highlands in Sarawak, Malaysia. Building on
their direct involvement in the development of the project, the
authors appraise the process in retrospect through a thematic
analysis. Themes covered include the project's local and
international contexts, community involvement and agency, the
balance of tourism and authenticity, and the role of non-local
partners. Through their analysis, the authors unpack the
complexities of cultural representation and identity in heritage
design practice, and investigates the relationship between capacity
building and agency in cultural heritage management. Situating the
project within international trends in museology, Museum
Development and Cultural Representation offers a valuable case
example of a heritage-making process in an indigenous community. It
will be of interest to scholars and students studying cultural
representation, as well as communities and museum professionals
looking to develop similar projects.
What does it mean to work inter-culturally? Our multi-cultural society is changing the parameters of counselling. Working Inter-Culturally in Counselling Settings explores how racial issues can be recognised and worked within a practical, clinical setting. The book looks at how the counselling setting can influence practice, and the book includes chapters in a range of settings, including: * counselling training and supervision * social work * the probation service and prisons * setting up counselling services in culturally diverse communities. Aisha Dupont-Joshua, together with contributors of diverse cultural heritage, moves away from exclusive white models of thought, and adopts more of a world view, inclusive of cultural difference. Working Inter-Culturally in Counselling Settings will be invaluable for counsellors, trainers, supervisors and other mental health professionals.
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This volume brings together researchers and participants from
diverse groups, reflecting the different ways in which the field of
multicultural literacies has been interpreted. A common theme
across the chapters is attention to the ways in which elements of
difference--race, ethnicity, gender, class, and language--create
dynamic tensions that influence students' literacy experiences and
achievement. The hope of the editors is that readers will build on
the experiences and findings presented so that the field of
multicultural literacies will have a greater impact of literacy
research, policy, and practice.
First published in 1997, this volume confronts the common
impression of Japan as a successfully homogeneous society which
conceals some profound tensions, and one such case is presented by
the ethnic Korean community. Despite many shared cultural features
there are marked contrasts between the Japanese and Korean value
systems and interaction is embittered by Japan's colonial record in
Korea up to 1945. This study examines all major aspects of the
Korean experience in Japan including their evolving legal status,
political divisions and cultural life as well as the effect of
Japan's relations with Korean regimes.
Between the turn of the twentieth century and the Brown v. Board of
Education decision in 1954, the way that American schools taught
about "race" changed dramatically. This transformation was
engineered by the nation's most prominent anthropologists,
including Franz Boas, Ruth Benedict, and Margaret Mead, during
World War II. Inspired by scientific racism in Nazi Germany, these
activist scholars decided that the best way to fight racial
prejudice was to teach what they saw as the truth about race in the
institution that had the power to do the most good-American
schools. Anthropologists created lesson plans, lectures, courses,
and pamphlets designed to revise what they called "the 'race'
concept" in American education. They believed that if teachers
presented race in scientific and egalitarian terms, conveying human
diversity as learned habits of culture rather than innate
characteristics, American citizens would become less racist.
Although nearly forgotten today, this educational reform movement
represents an important component of early civil rights activism
that emerged alongside the domestic and global tensions of wartime.
Drawing on hundreds of first-hand accounts written by teachers
nationwide, Zoe Burkholder traces the influence of this
anthropological activism on the way that teachers understood,
spoke, and taught about race. She explains how and why teachers
readily understood certain theoretical concepts, such as the
division of race into three main categories, while they struggled
to make sense of more complex models of cultural diversity and
structural inequality. As they translated theories into practice,
teachers crafted an educational discourse on race that differed
significantly from the definition of race produced by scientists at
mid-century.
Schoolteachers and their approach to race were put into the
spotlight with the Brown v. Board of Education case, but the belief
that racially integrated schools would eradicate racism in the next
generation and eliminate the need for discussion of racial
inequality long predated this. Discussions of race in the classroom
were silenced during the early Cold War until a new generation of
antiracist, "multicultural" educators emerged in the 1970s."
Addressing leadership issues in American schools, this volume
examines various strategies for creating inclusive schools,
including zero tolerance policies, teachers' perceptions of African
American principals' leadership in urban schools, and perceptions
of intergroup conflict.
Contents: Preface: Dark Days - September 11, 2001 Part I: The Beginnings of a Millennium: 1990s 1. The Coming of My Last Born - April 8, 1998 The Eclipse of Society, 1901-2001 2. Blood and Skin - 1999 Whose We? - Dark Thoughts of the Universal Self, 1998 3. A Call in the Morning - 1988 The Rights and Justices of the Multicultural Panic, 1990s Part II: The Last New Century: 1890s 4. Calling out Father by Calling up His Mother - About 1941 The Coloured Woman's Office: Anna Julia Cooper, 1892 5. Get On Home! - About 1949 Bad Dreams of Big Business: Charlotte Perkins Gilman, 1898 6. All Kinds of People Getting Off - 1954 The Colour Line: W.E.B. Du Bois, 1903 Part III: Between, Before, and Beyond/1873-2020 7. When Good People Do Evil - 1989 The Queer Passing of Analytic Things: Nella Larsen, 1929 8. What Would Jesus Have Done? - 1965 The Race of Time: Deconstruction, Du Bois, & Reconstruction, 1935-1873 9. Dreaming in the Dark - November 26, 1997 Justice in the Colonizer's Nightmare: Muhammad, Malcolm, & Necessary Drag, 1965-2020 10. A Call in the Night - February 11, 2000 The Gospel According to Matt: Suicide and the Good of Society, 2000 Acknowledgements Endnotes Endmatter, including index
A wedding serves as the beginning marker of a marriage; if a couple
is to manage cultural differences throughout their relationship,
they must first pass the hurdle of designing a wedding ceremony
that accommodates those differences. In this volume, author Wendy
Leeds-Hurwitz documents the weddings of 112 couples from across the
United States, studied over a 10-year period. She focuses on
intercultural weddings--interracial, interethnic, interfaith,
international, and interclass--looking at how real people are
coping with cultural differences in their lives.
Through detailed case studies, the book explores how couples
display different identities simultaneously. The concepts of
community, ritual, identity, and meaning are given extensive
consideration. Because material culture plays a particularly
important role in weddings as in other examples of ritual, food,
clothing, and objects are given special attention here.
Focusing on how couples design a wedding ritual to simultaneously
meet multiple--and different--requirements, this book provides:
*extensive details of actual behavior by couples;
*an innovative format: six traditional theoretical chapters, with
examples integrated into the discussion, are matched to six
"interludes" providing detailed descriptions of the most successful
examples of resolving intercultural differences;
*a methodological appendix detailing what was done and why these
decisions were made; and
*a theoretical appendix outlining the study's assumptions in
detail.
"Wedding as Text: Communicating Cultural Identities Through
Ritual" is a distinctive study of those who have accepted cultural
difference into their daily lives and how they have managed to do
so successfully. As such, it is suitable for students and scholars
in semiotics, intercultural communication, ritual, material
culture, family communication, and family studies, and will be
valuable reading for anyone facing the issue of cultural
difference.
A wedding serves as the beginning marker of a marriage; if a couple
is to manage cultural differences throughout their relationship,
they must first pass the hurdle of designing a wedding ceremony
that accommodates those differences. In this volume, author Wendy
Leeds-Hurwitz documents the weddings of 112 couples from across the
United States, studied over a 10-year period. She focuses on
intercultural weddings--interracial, interethnic, interfaith,
international, and interclass--looking at how real people are
coping with cultural differences in their lives.
Through detailed case studies, the book explores how couples
display different identities simultaneously. The concepts of
community, ritual, identity, and meaning are given extensive
consideration. Because material culture plays a particularly
important role in weddings as in other examples of ritual, food,
clothing, and objects are given special attention here.
Focusing on how couples design a wedding ritual to simultaneously
meet multiple--and different--requirements, this book provides:
*extensive details of actual behavior by couples;
*an innovative format: six traditional theoretical chapters, with
examples integrated into the discussion, are matched to six
"interludes" providing detailed descriptions of the most successful
examples of resolving intercultural differences;
*a methodological appendix detailing what was done and why these
decisions were made; and
*a theoretical appendix outlining the study's assumptions in
detail.
"Wedding as Text: Communicating Cultural Identities Through
Ritual" is a distinctive study of those who have accepted cultural
difference into their daily lives and how they have managed to do
so successfully. As such, it is suitable for students and scholars
in semiotics, intercultural communication, ritual, material
culture, family communication, and family studies, and will be
valuable reading for anyone facing the issue of cultural
difference.
This book presents the struggle for dialogue and understanding
between teachers and refugee and immigrant families, in their own
words. Forging a stronger connection between teachers, newcomers,
and their families is one of the greatest challenges facing schools
in the United States. Teachers need to become familiar with the
political, economic, and sociocultural contexts of these newcomers'
lives, and the role of the U.S. in influencing these contexts in
positive and negative ways.
The important contribution of "American Dreams, Global Visions" is
to bring together global issues of international politics and
economics and their effects on migration and refugee situations,
national issues of language and social policy, and local issues of
education and finding ways to live together in an increasingly
diverse society.
Narratives of four immigrant families in the United States (Hmong,
Mexican, Assyrian/Kurdish, Kosovar) and the teacher-researchers who
are coming to know them form the heart of this work. The narratives
are interwoven with data from the research and critical analysis of
how the narratives reflect and embody local, national, and global
contexts of power. The themes that are developed set the stage for
critical dialogues about culture, language, history, and power.
Central to the book is a rationale and methodology for teachers to
conduct "dialogic research" with refugees and immigrants--research
encompassing methods as once ethnographic, participatory, and
narrative--which seeks to engage researchers and participants in
dialogues that shed light on economic, political, social, and
cultural relationships; to represent these relationships in texts;
and to extend these dialogues to promote broader understanding and
social justice in schools and communities.
"American Dreams, Global Visions" will interest teachers, social
workers, and others who work with immigrants and refugees;
researchers, professionals, and students across the fields of
education, language and culture, ethnic studies, American studies,
and anthropology; and members of the general public interested in
learning more about America's most recent newcomers. It is
particularly appropriate for courses in foundations of education,
multicultural education, comparative education, language and
culture, and qualitative research.
Prominent sociologist Charles Lemert compellingly argues that race is the central feature of modern culture; this was true for the twentieth century and it will be true for the twenty-first. If we want to understand how the world works, Lemert explains, we must understand the centrality of race in our lives and in the foundation of our society. We must also be able to face up to what we've done to one another in the name of race.
Published in 1997. The Urban Institute has been studying
immigration for almost a decade and a half. In recent years, the
Institute's focus has widened to include immigration integration.
Unlike immigration policy, which is a federal responsibility,
policies regarding immigrant integration have been left in the
hands of states and localities and vary widely by region. This book
focuses on the 1980-1990 experience of a high-immigrant state whose
immigrant population matches the race and ethnic composition of the
US population as a whole more closely than any other state. 'New
Jersey's experience with immigration is not necessarily typical of
outcomes in other high-immigration states, but it may be replicable
on a broader scale. As a new century approaches and as debate over
immigration legislation reaches a fever pitch, it is important to
analyze, in the fashion of this volume, instances of successful
immigration that can serve as examples for other states, the United
States as a whole and other nations...' (Thomas Espenshade).
This classic book is a powerful indictment of contemporary
attitudes to race. By accusing British intellectuals and
politicians on both sides of the political divide of refusing to
take race seriously, Paul Gilroy caused immediate uproar when this
book was first published in 1987. A brilliant and explosive
exploration of racial discourses, There Ain't No Black in the Union
Jack provided a powerful new direction for race relations in
Britain. Still dynamite today and as relevant as ever, this
Routledge Classics edition includes a new introduction by the
author.
This book examines the intersections of representations of race and gender identity in writings by contemporary US men. The author seeks strategies for approaching ostensibly sexist or homophobic texts by men of colour in ways which grasp how homophobia or sexism coexist or are engendered by certain articulations of anti-racism, or conversely, how certain articulations of gender concerns help produce reactionary ideas about race.
Cybertypes looks at the impact of the web and its discourses upon our ideas about race, and vice versa. Examining internet advertising, role-playing games, chat rooms, cyberpunk fiction from Neuromancer to The Matrix and web design, Nakamura traces the real-life consequences that follow when we attempt to push issues of race and identity on-line.
"Race-ing Art History" is the first comprehensive anthology to
place issues of racial representation squarely on the canvas.
Within these pages are representations of Nubians in ancient art,
the great tradition of Western masters such as Manet and Picasso,
and contemporary work by lesser known artists of color.
Assembled chronologically, these essays draw upon multiculturalism,
postcolonialism, and critical race theory to confront the
longstanding tradition of art as a means of looking at "the other."
The essays address important questions about racial visibility and
racial politics, asking whether modern concepts of race can be
imposed upon ancient art, whether there is a link between pictorial
realism and Orientalism, and how today's artists and critics can
engage our visual culture's inherent racialized dimension.
Richly illustrated, this pioneering volume lays the groundwork for
a better understanding of the complex and shifting category of race
and its significance in our visual culture and everyday lives.
Unmatched in historical scope and presentation, "Race-ing Art
History" will be the essential guide to the opportunities and
challenges involved in integrating race into the study of art. A
discussion guide is available at www.routledge-ny.com/pinderguide.
Also includes an 8-page color insert.
Cybertypes looks at the impact of the web and its discourses upon our ideas about race, and vice versa. Examining internet advertising, role-playing games, chat rooms, cyberpunk fiction from Neuromancer to The Matrix and web design, Nakamura traces the real-life consequences that follow when we attempt to push issues of race and identity on-line.
In recent years, the far right has done everything in its power to
accelerate the heating: an American president who believes it is a
hoax has removed limits on fossil fuel production. The Brazilian
president has opened the Amazon and watched it burn. In Europe,
parties denying the crisis and insisting on maximum combustion have
stormed into office, from Sweden to Spain. On the brink of
breakdown, the forces most aggressively promoting business-as-usual
have surged - always in defense of white privilege, against
supposed threats from non-white others. Where have they come from?
The first study of the far right in the climate crisis, White Skin,
Black Fuel: On the Danger of Fossil Fascism presents an eye-opening
sweep of a novel political constellation, and reveals its deep
historical roots. Fossil-fueled technologies were born steeped in
racism. None loved them more passionately than the classical
fascists. As such forces rise to the surface, some profess to have
the solution - closing borders to save the climate. Epic and
riveting, White Skin, Black Fuel traces a future of political
fronts that can only heat up.
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