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The Habits of Racism - A Phenomenology of Racism and Racialized Embodiment (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,279
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The Habits of Racism - A Phenomenology of Racism and Racialized Embodiment (Hardcover)
Series: Philosophy of Race
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The Habits of Racism examines some of the complex questions raised
by the phenomenon and experience of racism. Helen Ngo draws on the
resources of Merleau-Ponty to show how the conceptual reworking of
habit as bodily orientation helps to identify the subtle but more
fundamental workings of racism--to catch its insidious, gestural
expressions, as well as its habitual modes of racialized
perception. Racism, as Ngo argues, is equally expressed through
bodily habits, which, once reformulated, raises important ethical
questions regarding the responsibility for one's racist habits. Ngo
then/also considers what the lived experience of racism and
racialization teaches us about the nature of embodied and
socially-situated being, arguing that racialized embodiment
problematizes and extends existing accounts of embodied experience,
and calls into question dominant philosophical paradigms of the
"self" as coherent, fluid, and synchronous. Drawing on thinkers
such as Fanon, she argues that the racialized body is "in front of
itself" and "uncanny" (in the Heideggerian senses of "strange" and
"not-at-home"), while exploring the phenomenological and
existential implications of this disorientation and displacement.
Finally, she returns to the visual register to take up the question
of objectification in the racist gaze, critically examining the
subject-object ontology presupposed by Sartre's account of "the
gaze" (le regard). Recalling that all embodied being is always
already relational and co-constituting, Ngo draws on
Merleau-Ponty's concept of the intertwining to argue that a
phenomenology of racialized embodiment reveals to us the
ontological violence of racism-not a merely violation of one's
subjectivity as commonly claimed, but also a violation of one's
intersubjectivity. The original arguments in The Habits of Racism
will be of particular value to students and scholars interested in
critical philosophy of race, phenomenology, and social and
political philosophy, and may also be of interest to those working
in feminist philosophy, queer studies, and disability studies.
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