Introduction - Writing a Handbook on critical race and whiteness theory in the time of Black Lives Matter and anti-racism backlashRikke Andreassen, Suvi Keskinen, Catrin Lundström and Shirley Anne TateSection 1 Technologies2. Introduction to the ‘Technologies’ section3. France Winddance Twine: Silicon Valley’s caste system: Whiteness as a form of geek capital4. Pauline Leonard: Artificialising whiteness? How AI normalises whiteness in theory, policy and practice5. Matthew Hughey: White time: The relationship between racial identity, contexts, interactions, and temporalitySection 2 Consumption 6. Introduction to the ‘Consumption’ section 7. Katarina Mattsson: The whiteness of tourism8. Raka Shome: Whiteness, wellness, and gender: A transnational feminist approach9. Rikke Andreassen, Daisy Deomampo and Jennifer A. Hamilton: Racial reproductions and genetic imaginaries10. Beverly Lemire: Textiles, fashion and race: Technologies of whiteness in the British colonies and metropole, c. 1700–1820Section 3 Institutions11. Introduction to the ‘Institutions’ section12. Jason Arday: Walls can come tumbling down: Negotiating normative whiteness and racial micro-aggressions and Black and minority ethnic (BME) mental health within the academy13. Marta Araújo: ‘Talking about institutionalised racism or racism in institutions?’ The educational segregation of the Roma14. Deborah Gabriel: Do Black Lives Really Matter? Social Closure, White Privilege and the Making of a Black Underclass in Higher Education 15. Shirley Anne Tate: ‘If you were a white man, they would have negotiated with you the minute you were approached’: Bodies of value in academic life16. Victor Ojakorotu, Samuel Chukwudi Agunyai & Vincent Chukwukadibia Onwughalu: Division in Economic Integration: The effect of apartheid on white supremacy, white prosperity, and disunity in South AfricaSection 4 Crisis17. Introduction to the ‘Crisis’ section18. Mike Hill: Whiteness in the Trumpocene: Civil society, security and after19. Ashley ("Woody") Doane: The future of whiteness 20. Diana Mulinari and Anders Neergaard: The Swedish racial formation: A critique of the sociology of absence21. Katharina Wiedlack and Tania Zabolotnaya: Race, whiteness, Russianness and the discourses on the ‘Black Lives Matter’ movement and Manizha22. Suvi Keskinen: The ‘crisis’ of white hegemony, far-right politics and entitlement to wealthSection 5 Emotions23. Introduction to the ‘Emotions’ section24. Shannon Sullivan: The white habit of untrauma25. Paul C. Taylor and Lisa Madura: Racial habit26. Tobias Hübinette and Catrin Lundström: White melancholia: A historicised analysis of hegemonic whiteness in Sweden27. Josephine Cornell, Nick Malherbe, Kopano Ratele and Shahnaaz Suffla: Whiteness, masculinity and the decolonising imperativeSection 6 Identities28. Introduction to the ‘Identities’ section29. Damien W. Riggs, Ruth Pearce, Sally Hines, Carla Pfeffer and Francis Ray White: Whiteness in research on men, trans/masculine and non-binary people and reproduction: Two parallel stories30. Christianne F. Collantes and Jason Vincent A. Cabañes: Modern dating in a post-colonial city: Desire, race, and identities of cosmopolitanism in Metro Manila31. MiloÅ¡ Debnár: White European migrants in Japan – between an unmarked category and racialized subjects32. Yuna Sato, Adrijana Miladinovic and Sayaka Osanami Törngren: To be or not to be ‘white’ in Japan: Japaneseness and racial whiteness through the lens of mixed JapaneseSection 7 On the margins: 33. Introduction to the ‘On the margins’ section34. KristÃn Loftsdóttir: Coloniality and Europe at the margins 35. Matt Wray and Catherine Wolfe: White settler colonialism, ‘chromanyms’, and the trouble with marginal whites36. Benjamin Teitlebaum: ‘You didn’t mention your own identity as a white man’. Ideological boundaries of whiteness
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