Full Description
This book focuses on the mechanisms that undergird the operation of racialization and works to empirically define the specific mechanisms by which racialization outside of black-white paradigm operates.
The contributors highlight the advantages and benefits of using case studies from outside of the black-white racial boundary in the social scientific study of racism, racial identity, racial meaning, and racial representation. Their contributions can be grouped into three specific areas of focus: the investigation of the relationship between racialization and the state; the interplay between racialization and identities; and the role of racialization in the media. Taken together, the book lays out a roadmap for future study of racialization and the study of race beyond the racial categories of black and white
Serving as a guiding point to future research, this book will be of interest to all scholars of race, and those seeking to understand the ideologies, actions, interactions, structures and social practices associated with racialization. This book was originally published as a special issue of Ethnic and Racial Studies.
Contents
Introduction: Exploring the mechanisms of racialization beyond the black-white binary 1. Accommodation crisis: the racialization of travellers in twenty-first century England 2. American federalism and racial formation in contemporary immigration policy: a processual analysis of Alabama's HB56 3. Gendered racialization: Muslim American men and women's encounters with racialized surveillance 4. Resisting and reifying racialization among urban American Indians 5. Moving beyond (and back to) the black-white binary: a study of black and white Muslims' racial positioning in the United States 6. MOU or an IOU? Latina/os and the racialization of media policy 7. Yellow peril, red scare: race and communism in National Review 8. Still the tragic mulatto? Manufacturing multiracialization in magazine media, 1961-2011