Like many of my friends I didn’t really realise that I was working
class until I went to university. Suddenly, what I thought as normal
became subtly and not so subtly differentiated as I came into close
contact with the middle classes. I had not known a time, though, when
I hadn’t been white, but I didn’t really realise that I was white
until I read David Roediger’s (1991) book ‘The Wages of
Whiteness’. Through reading this work and others on the topic of
whiteness the sense of my own whiteness became palpable to me. Namely,
that what I naively thought to be a timeless property of my skin was a
social construction that had acquired so much symbolic weight over
time that it had become seemingly real: a racial formation and
project. This was with consequences, in that a good part of my actual
and psychological labour market and other employment benefits were not
part of a meritocratic system, but due to the oppression of people of
colour. This might be part of a system that I at the time associated
only with the far-right, a system of white supremacy. Fundamentally,
my skin was property and the gains that I had made through it were at
the expense of others. I was a ‘so called white’ (Ignatiev and
Garvey, 1996) who everyday made a political decision to not commit
‘treason’ to whiteness.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781402061080
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
Springer
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter