"Re-Situating Identities" signals a crucial move away from the
extremes of statistical reductionism and textual preoccupation
which have marked race and ethnic studies. Instead, inspired by an
insistence on concrete social and political change, these essays
seek to re-energize the field by systematic and empirically
grounded investigation of the production of identities in power
relationships. Working with ethnographic data, life histories, and
historical documents, sociologists, anthropologists and cultural
theorists from Britain, Canada, and the United States present a
diverse array of scenarios from courtrooms and classrooms to
diasporas, communities, state memorials, and media representations.
Each scenario raises an array of critical questions of existing
theory and policy: What is the impact of multiculturalist policies?
Should the term "race" still be used? What are the controversies
surrounding the concept of "black cultures"? What part do race and
ethnicity play in the construction of collective memories? What
part do notions of home play in the organization of racial
exclusion? What can we learn about racism from life stories? How is
nationalism mediated by the local experiences it attempts to
supersede? And what does the local mean and what is its
relationship to globalization?
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