White Negritude analyzes the discourse of mesti?agem (mestizaje, m?tissage, or "mixing") in Brazil. Focused on Gilberto Freyre's sociology of plantation relations, it interrogates the relation of power to writing and canon formation, and the emergence of an exclusionary, ethnographic discourse that
When Whites Riot: Writing Race and Violence in American and South African Culture
β Scribed by Sheila Smith McKoy
- Publisher
- University of Wisconsin Press
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 183
- Edition
- 1st
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In a bold work that cuts across racial, ethnic, cultural, and national boundaries, Sheila Smith McKoy reveals how race colors the idea of violence in the United States and in South Africaβtwo countries inevitably and inextricably linked by the central role of skin color in personal and national identity.
Β Β Β Although race riots are usually seen as black events in both the United States and South Africa, they have played a significant role in shaping the concept of whiteness and white power in both nations. This emerges clearly from Smith McKoy's examination of four riots that demonstrate the relationship between the two nations and the apartheid practices that have historically defined them: North Carolina's Wilmington Race Riot of 1898; the Soweto Uprising of 1976; the Los Angeles Rebellion in 1992; and the pre-election riot in Mmabatho, Bhoputhatswana in 1994. Pursuing these events through narratives, media reports, and film, Smith McKoy shows how white racial violence has been disguised by race riots in the political and power structures of both the United States and South Africa.
Β Β Β The first transnational study to probe the abiding inclination to "blacken" riots, When Whites Riot unravels the connection between racial violenceβboth the white and the "raced"βin the United States and South Africa, as well as the social dynamics that this connection sustains.
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