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Crossing Lines - Race and Mixed Race Across the Geohistorical Divide (Paperback): Marc Coronado, Rudy P. Guevarra, Jeffrey A.... Crossing Lines - Race and Mixed Race Across the Geohistorical Divide (Paperback)
Marc Coronado, Rudy P. Guevarra, Jeffrey A. S. Moniz, Laura Furlan Szanto; Contributions by Carina Evans, …
R1,056 Discovery Miles 10 560 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Crossing Lines addresses the issues of race and mixed race at the turn of the 21st century. Representing multiple academic disciplines, including history, ethnic studies, art history, education, English, and sociology, the volume invites readers to consider the many ways that identity, community, and collectivity are formed, while addressing the challenges that multiracial identity poses to our understanding of race and ethnicity. The authors examine such subjects as social action, literary representations of multiracial people, curriculum development, community formation, Whiteness, and demographic changes.

American Studies in a Moment of Danger (Paperback): George Lipsitz American Studies in a Moment of Danger (Paperback)
George Lipsitz
R604 Discovery Miles 6 040 Ships in 12 - 17 working days
Confessions of a Radical Chicano Doo-Wop Singer (Paperback): Ruben Funkahuatl Guevara Confessions of a Radical Chicano Doo-Wop Singer (Paperback)
Ruben Funkahuatl Guevara; Introduction by Josh Kun, George Lipsitz
R746 R644 Discovery Miles 6 440 Save R102 (14%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

A pioneer of Chicano rock, Ruben Funkahuatl Guevara performed with Frank Zappa, Johnny Otis, Bo Diddley, Tina Turner, and Celia Cruz, though he is best known as the front man of the 1970s experimental rock band Ruben And The Jets. Here he recounts how his youthful experiences in the barrio La Veinte of Santa Monica in the 1940s prepared him for early success in music and how his triumphs and seductive brushes with stardom were met with tragedy and crushing disappointments. Brutally honest and open, Confessions of a Radical Chicano Doo-Wop Singer is an often hilarious and self-critical look inside the struggle of becoming an artist and a man. Recognizing racial identity as composite, contested, and complex, Guevara-an American artist of Mexican descent-embraces a Chicano identity of his own design, calling himself a Chicano "culture sculptor" who has worked to transform the aspirations, alienations, and indignities of the Mexican American people into an aesthetic experience that could point the way to liberation.

Confessions of a Radical Chicano Doo-Wop Singer (Hardcover): Ruben Funkahuatl Guevara Confessions of a Radical Chicano Doo-Wop Singer (Hardcover)
Ruben Funkahuatl Guevara; Introduction by Josh Kun, George Lipsitz
R2,028 R1,856 Discovery Miles 18 560 Save R172 (8%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

A pioneer of Chicano rock, Ruben Funkahuatl Guevara performed with Frank Zappa, Johnny Otis, Bo Diddley, Tina Turner, and Celia Cruz, though he is best known as the front man of the 1970s experimental rock band Ruben And The Jets. Here he recounts how his youthful experiences in the barrio La Veinte of Santa Monica in the 1940s prepared him for early success in music and how his triumphs and seductive brushes with stardom were met with tragedy and crushing disappointments. Brutally honest and open, Confessions of a Radical Chicano Doo-Wop Singer is an often hilarious and self-critical look inside the struggle of becoming an artist and a man. Recognizing racial identity as composite, contested, and complex, Guevara-an American artist of Mexican descent-embraces a Chicano identity of his own design, calling himself a Chicano "culture sculptor" who has worked to transform the aspirations, alienations, and indignities of the Mexican American people into an aesthetic experience that could point the way to liberation.

Youthscapes - The Popular, the National, the Global (Paperback, New): Sunaina Maira, Elisabeth Soep Youthscapes - The Popular, the National, the Global (Paperback, New)
Sunaina Maira, Elisabeth Soep; Contributions by George Lipsitz
R749 Discovery Miles 7 490 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Young people, it seems, are both everywhere and nowhere. The media are crowded with images of youth as deviant or fashionable, personifying a society's anxieties and hopes about its own transformation. However, theories of globalization, nationalism, and citizenship tend to focus on adult actors. Youthscapes sets youth at the heart of globalization by exploring the meanings young people have created for themselves through their engagements with popular cultures, national ideologies, and global markets. The term "youthscapes" places local youth practices within the context of ongoing shifts in national and global forces. Using this framework, the book revitalizes discussions about youth cultures and social movements, while simultaneously reflecting on the uses of youth as an academic and political category. Tracing young people's movements across physical and imagined spaces, the authors examine various cases of young people as they participate in social relations; use and invent technology; earn, spend, need, and despise money; comprise target markets while producing their own original media; and create their own understandings of citizenship. The essays examine young Thai women working in the transnational beauty industry, former child soldiers in Sierra Leone, Latino youth using graphic art in political organizing, a Sri Lankan refugee's fan relationship with Jackie Chan, and Somali high school students in the United States and Canada. Drawing on methodologies and frameworks from multiple fields, such as anthropology, sociology, and film studies, the volume is useful to those studying and teaching issues of youth culture, popular culture, globalization, social movements, education, and media. By focusing on the intersection between globalization studies and youth culture, the authors offer a vital contribution to the development of a new, interdisciplinary approach to youth culture studies.

The Possessive Investment in Whiteness - How White People Profit from Identity Politics, Revised and Expanded Edition... The Possessive Investment in Whiteness - How White People Profit from Identity Politics, Revised and Expanded Edition (Paperback, Revised and expanded ed)
George Lipsitz
R771 Discovery Miles 7 710 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Taking a look at white supremacy, this work argues that racism is a matter of interests as well as attitudes, a problem of property as well as pigment. This work shows how whiteness works in respect to Asian Americans, Latinos, and Native Americans.

Seeing Race Again - Countering Colorblindness across the Disciplines (Paperback): Kimberle Williams Crenshaw, Luke Charles... Seeing Race Again - Countering Colorblindness across the Disciplines (Paperback)
Kimberle Williams Crenshaw, Luke Charles Harris, Daniel Martinez HoSang, George Lipsitz
R834 R715 Discovery Miles 7 150 Save R119 (14%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Every academic discipline has an origin story complicit with white supremacy. Racial hierarchy and colonialism structured the very foundations of most disciplines' research and teaching paradigms. In the early twentieth century, the academy faced rising opposition and correction, evident in the intervention of scholars including W. E. B. Du Bois, Zora Neale Hurston, Carter G. Woodson, and others. By the mid-twentieth century, education itself became a center in the struggle for social justice. Scholars mounted insurgent efforts to discredit some of the most odious intellectual defenses of white supremacy in academia, but the disciplines and their keepers remained unwilling to interrogate many of the racist foundations of their fields, instead embracing a framework of racial colorblindness as their default position. This book challenges scholars and students to see race again. Examining the racial histories and colorblindness in fields as diverse as social psychology, the law, musicology, literary studies, sociology, and gender studies, Seeing Race Again documents the profoundly contradictory role of the academy in constructing, naturalizing, and reproducing racial hierarchy. It shows how colorblindness compromises the capacity of disciplines to effectively respond to the wide set of contemporary political, economic, and social crises marking public life today.

Insubordinate Spaces - Improvisation and Accompaniment for Social Justice (Paperback): Barbara Tomlinson, George Lipsitz Insubordinate Spaces - Improvisation and Accompaniment for Social Justice (Paperback)
Barbara Tomlinson, George Lipsitz
R774 R731 Discovery Miles 7 310 Save R43 (6%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Insubordinate spaces are places of possibility, products of acts of accompaniment and improvisation that deepen capacities for democratic social change. Barbara Tomlinson and George Lipsitz's Insubordinate Spaces explores the challenges facing people committed to social justice in an era when social institutions have increasingly been reconfigured to conform to the imperatives of a market society. In their book, the authors argue that education, the arts, and activism are key terrains of political and ideological conflict. They explore and analyze exemplary projects responding to current social justice issues and crises, from the Idle No More movement launched by Indigenous people in Canada to the performance art of Chingo Bling, Fandango convenings, the installation art of Ramiro Gomez, and the mass protests proclaiming "Black Lives Matter" in Ferguson, MO. Tomlinson and Lipsitz draw on key concepts from struggles to advance ideas about reciprocal recognition and co-creation as components in the construction of new egalitarian and democratic social relations, practices, and institutions.

The Possessive Investment in Whiteness - How White People Profit from Identity Politics (Paperback, 1, Twentieth Anniversary... The Possessive Investment in Whiteness - How White People Profit from Identity Politics (Paperback, 1, Twentieth Anniversary Edition)
George Lipsitz
R774 R731 Discovery Miles 7 310 Save R43 (6%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

George Lipsitz's classic book The Possessive Investment in Whiteness argues that public policy and private prejudice work together to create a possessive investment in whiteness that is responsible for the racialized hierarchies of our society. Whiteness has a cash value: it accounts for advantages that come to individuals through profits made from housing secured in discriminatory markets, through the unequal educational opportunities available to children of different races, through insider networks that channel employment opportunities to the friends and relatives of those who have profited most from past and present discrimination, and especially through intergenerational transfers of inherited wealth that pass on the spoils of discrimination to succeeding generations. White Americans are encouraged to invest in whiteness, to remain true to an identity that provides them with structured advantages. In this twentieth anniversary edition, Lipsitz provides a new introduction and updated statistics; as well as analyses of the enduring importance of Hurricane Katrina; the nature of anti-immigrant mobilizations; police assaults on Black women, the killings of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, and Freddie Gray; the legacy of Obama and the emergence of Trump; the Charleston Massacre and other hate crimes; and the ways in which white fear, white fragility, and white failure have become drivers of a new ethno-nationalism. As vital as it was upon its original publication, the twentieth anniversary edition of The Possessive Investment in Whiteness is an unflinching but necessary look at white supremacy.

Footsteps in the Dark - The Hidden Histories of Popular Music (Paperback): George Lipsitz Footsteps in the Dark - The Hidden Histories of Popular Music (Paperback)
George Lipsitz
R611 R531 Discovery Miles 5 310 Save R80 (13%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Most pop songs are short-lived. They appear suddenly and, if they catch on, seem to be everywhere at once before disappearing again into obscurity. Yet some songs resonate more deeply--often in ways that reflect broader historical and cultural changes.
In Footsteps in the Dark," George Lipsitz illuminates these secret meanings, offering imaginative interpretations of a wide range of popular music genres from jazz to salsa to rock. Sweeping changes that only remotely register in official narratives, Lipsitz argues, can appear in vivid relief within popular music, especially when these changes occur outside mainstream white culture. Using a wealth of revealing examples, he discusses such topics as the emergence of an African American techno music subculture in Detroit as a contradictory case of digital capitalism and the prominence of banda, merengue, and salsa music in the 1990s as an expression of changing Mexican, Dominican, and Puerto Rican nationalisms. Approaching race and popular music from another direction, he analyzes the Ken Burns PBS series Jazz "as a largely uncritical celebration of American nationalism that obscures the civil rights era's challenge to racial inequality, and he takes on the infamous campaigns to censor hip-hop and the radical black voice in the early 1990s.
Teeming with astute observations and brilliant insights about race and racism, deindustrialization, and urban renewal and their connections to music, Footsteps in the Dark" puts forth an alternate history of post-cold war America and shows why in an era given to easy answers and cliched versions of history, pop songs matter more than ever.
George Lipsitz is professor of blackstudies and sociology at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Among his many books are Life in the Struggle," Dangerous Crossroads," and American Studies in a Moment of Danger" (Minnesota, 2001).

Insubordinate Spaces - Improvisation and Accompaniment for Social Justice (Hardcover): Barbara Tomlinson, George Lipsitz Insubordinate Spaces - Improvisation and Accompaniment for Social Justice (Hardcover)
Barbara Tomlinson, George Lipsitz
R2,247 R1,998 Discovery Miles 19 980 Save R249 (11%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Insubordinate spaces are places of possibility, products of acts of accompaniment and improvisation that deepen capacities for democratic social change. Barbara Tomlinson and George Lipsitz's Insubordinate Spaces explores the challenges facing people committed to social justice in an era when social institutions have increasingly been reconfigured to conform to the imperatives of a market society. In their book, the authors argue that education, the arts, and activism are key terrains of political and ideological conflict. They explore and analyze exemplary projects responding to current social justice issues and crises, from the Idle No More movement launched by Indigenous people in Canada to the performance art of Chingo Bling, Fandango convenings, the installation art of Ramiro Gomez, and the mass protests proclaiming "Black Lives Matter" in Ferguson, MO. Tomlinson and Lipsitz draw on key concepts from struggles to advance ideas about reciprocal recognition and co-creation as components in the construction of new egalitarian and democratic social relations, practices, and institutions.

Dangerous Crossroads - Popular Music, Postmodernism and the Poetics of Place (Paperback, New edition): George Lipsitz Dangerous Crossroads - Popular Music, Postmodernism and the Poetics of Place (Paperback, New edition)
George Lipsitz
R843 R736 Discovery Miles 7 360 Save R107 (13%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This volume provides coverage of musical styles from around the world, from Havana, Port-au-Prince, Kingston, Budapest, Paris, London, New York, Los Angeles to Tokyo. It explores the fusion of immigrant and mainstream cultures displayed in world music, including: rap, jazz, reggae, zouk, bhangra, juju, swamp pop and Puerto Rican Bugalu and Chicano punk.

How Racism Takes Place (Paperback, New): George Lipsitz How Racism Takes Place (Paperback, New)
George Lipsitz
R739 R675 Discovery Miles 6 750 Save R64 (9%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

How racism shapes urban spaces and how African Americans create vibrant communities that offer models for more equitable social arrangements

Seeing Race Again - Countering Colorblindness across the Disciplines (Hardcover): Kimberle Williams Crenshaw, Luke Charles... Seeing Race Again - Countering Colorblindness across the Disciplines (Hardcover)
Kimberle Williams Crenshaw, Luke Charles Harris, Daniel Martinez HoSang, George Lipsitz
R2,028 R1,856 Discovery Miles 18 560 Save R172 (8%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Every academic discipline has an origin story complicit with white supremacy. Racial hierarchy and colonialism structured the very foundations of most disciplines' research and teaching paradigms. In the early twentieth century, the academy faced rising opposition and correction, evident in the intervention of scholars including W. E. B. Du Bois, Zora Neale Hurston, Carter G. Woodson, and others. By the mid-twentieth century, education itself became a center in the struggle for social justice. Scholars mounted insurgent efforts to discredit some of the most odious intellectual defenses of white supremacy in academia, but the disciplines and their keepers remained unwilling to interrogate many of the racist foundations of their fields, instead embracing a framework of racial colorblindness as their default position. This book challenges scholars and students to see race again. Examining the racial histories and colorblindness in fields as diverse as social psychology, the law, musicology, literary studies, sociology, and gender studies, Seeing Race Again documents the profoundly contradictory role of the academy in constructing, naturalizing, and reproducing racial hierarchy. It shows how colorblindness compromises the capacity of disciplines to effectively respond to the wide set of contemporary political, economic, and social crises marking public life today.

The Fierce Urgency of Now - Improvisation, Rights, and the Ethics of Cocreation (Paperback): Daniel Fischlin, Ajay Heble,... The Fierce Urgency of Now - Improvisation, Rights, and the Ethics of Cocreation (Paperback)
Daniel Fischlin, Ajay Heble, George Lipsitz
R652 Discovery Miles 6 520 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

"The Fierce Urgency of Now" links musical improvisation to struggles for social change, focusing on the connections between the improvisation associated with jazz and the dynamics of human rights struggles and discourses. The authors acknowledge that at first glance improvisation and rights seem to belong to incommensurable areas of human endeavor. Improvisation connotes practices that are spontaneous, personal, local, immediate, expressive, ephemeral, and even accidental, while rights refer to formal standards of acceptable human conduct, rules that are permanent, impersonal, universal, abstract, and inflexible. Yet the authors not only suggest that improvisation and rights "can "be connected; they insist that they "must" be connected.

Improvisation is the creation and development of new, unexpected, and productive cocreative relations among people. It cultivates the capacity to discern elements of possibility, potential, hope, and promise where none are readily apparent. Improvisers work with the tools they have in the arenas that are open to them. Proceeding without a written score or script, they collaborate to envision and enact something new, to enrich their experience in the world by acting on it and changing it. By analyzing the dynamics of particular artistic improvisations, mostly by contemporary American jazz musicians, the authors reveal improvisation as a viable and urgently needed model for social change. In the process, they rethink politics, music, and the connections between them.

Midnight at the Barrelhouse - The Johnny Otis Story (Paperback): George Lipsitz Midnight at the Barrelhouse - The Johnny Otis Story (Paperback)
George Lipsitz
R519 R471 Discovery Miles 4 710 Save R48 (9%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days


Considered by many to be the godfather of R&B, Johnny Otis--musician, producer, artist, entrepreneur, pastor, disc jockey, writer, and tireless fighter for racial equality--has had a remarkable life by any measure. In this first biography of Otis, George Lipsitz tells the largely unknown story of a towering figure in the history of African American music and culture who was, by his own description, "black by persuasion."

Born to Greek immigrant parents in Vallejo, California, in 1921, Otis grew up in an integrated neighborhood and identified deeply with black music and culture from an early age. He moved to Los Angeles as a young man and submerged himself in the city's vibrant African American cultural life, centered on Central Avenue and its thriving music scene. Otis began his six-decade career in music playing drums in territory swing bands in the 1930s. He went on to lead his own band in the 1940s and open the Barrelhouse nightclub in Watts. His R&B band had seventeen Top 40 hits between 1950 and 1969, including "Willie and the Hand Jive." As a producer and A&R man, Otis discovered such legends as Etta James, Jackie Wilson, and Big Mama Thornton.

Otis also wrote a column for the "Sentinel, " one of L.A.'s leading black newspapers, became pastor of his own interracial church, hosted popular radio and television shows that introduced millions to music by African American artists, and was lauded as businessman of the year in a 1951 cover story in "Negro Achievements" magazine. Throughout his career Otis's driving passion has been his fearless and unyielding opposition to racial injustice, whether protesting on the front lines, exposing racism and championing the accomplishments of black Americans, or promoting African American musicians.

"Midnight at the Barrelhouse" is a chronicle of a life rich in both incident and inspiration, as well as an exploration of the complicated nature of race relations in twentieth-century America. Otis's total commitment to black culture and transcendence of racial boundaries, Lipsitz shows, teach important lessons about identity, race, and power while encapsulating the contradictions of racism in American society.

The Fierce Urgency of Now - Improvisation, Rights, and the Ethics of Cocreation (Hardcover, New): Daniel Fischlin, Ajay Heble,... The Fierce Urgency of Now - Improvisation, Rights, and the Ethics of Cocreation (Hardcover, New)
Daniel Fischlin, Ajay Heble, George Lipsitz
R2,581 R2,261 Discovery Miles 22 610 Save R320 (12%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

"The Fierce Urgency of Now" links musical improvisation to struggles for social change, focusing on the connections between the improvisation associated with jazz and the dynamics of human rights struggles and discourses. The authors acknowledge that at first glance improvisation and rights seem to belong to incommensurable areas of human endeavor. Improvisation connotes practices that are spontaneous, personal, local, immediate, expressive, ephemeral, and even accidental, while rights refer to formal standards of acceptable human conduct, rules that are permanent, impersonal, universal, abstract, and inflexible. Yet the authors not only suggest that improvisation and rights "can "be connected; they insist that they "must" be connected.

Improvisation is the creation and development of new, unexpected, and productive cocreative relations among people. It cultivates the capacity to discern elements of possibility, potential, hope, and promise where none are readily apparent. Improvisers work with the tools they have in the arenas that are open to them. Proceeding without a written score or script, they collaborate to envision and enact something new, to enrich their experience in the world by acting on it and changing it. By analyzing the dynamics of particular artistic improvisations, mostly by contemporary American jazz musicians, the authors reveal improvisation as a viable and urgently needed model for social change. In the process, they rethink politics, music, and the connections between them.

The Possessive Investment in Whiteness - How White People Profit from Identity Politics (Hardcover, 1, Twentieth Anniversary... The Possessive Investment in Whiteness - How White People Profit from Identity Politics (Hardcover, 1, Twentieth Anniversary Edition)
George Lipsitz
R2,476 R2,196 Discovery Miles 21 960 Save R280 (11%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

George Lipsitz's classic book The Possessive Investment in Whiteness argues that public policy and private prejudice work together to create a possessive investment in whiteness that is responsible for the racialized hierarchies of our society. Whiteness has a cash value: it accounts for advantages that come to individuals through profits made from housing secured in discriminatory markets, through the unequal educational opportunities available to children of different races, through insider networks that channel employment opportunities to the friends and relatives of those who have profited most from past and present discrimination, and especially through intergenerational transfers of inherited wealth that pass on the spoils of discrimination to succeeding generations. White Americans are encouraged to invest in whiteness, to remain true to an identity that provides them with structured advantages. In this twentieth anniversary edition, Lipsitz provides a new introduction and updated statistics; as well as analyses of the enduring importance of Hurricane Katrina; the nature of anti-immigrant mobilizations; police assaults on Black women, the killings of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, and Freddie Gray; the legacy of Obama and the emergence of Trump; the Charleston Massacre and other hate crimes; and the ways in which white fear, white fragility, and white failure have become drivers of a new ethno-nationalism. As vital as it was upon its original publication, the twentieth anniversary edition of The Possessive Investment in Whiteness is an unflinching but necessary look at white supremacy.

Time Passages - Collective Memory and American Popular Culture (Paperback): George Lipsitz Time Passages - Collective Memory and American Popular Culture (Paperback)
George Lipsitz
R621 Discovery Miles 6 210 Ships in 12 - 17 working days
A Life In The Struggle - Ivory Perry and the Culture of Opposition (Paperback, 2nd Edition): George Lipsitz A Life In The Struggle - Ivory Perry and the Culture of Opposition (Paperback, 2nd Edition)
George Lipsitz
R771 R722 Discovery Miles 7 220 Save R49 (6%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This book tells the story of Ivory Perry, a black worker and community activist who, for more than thirty years, has distributed the leaflets, carried the picket signs, and planned and participated in the confrontations that were essential to the success of protest movements. Using oral histories and extensive archival research, George Lipsitz examines the culture of opposition through the events of Perry's life of commitment and illumines the social and political changes and conflicts that have convulsed the United States during the past fifty years.

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