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Racist culture : philosophy and the politics of meaning

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Racist Culture offers an anti--essentialist and non--reductionist account of racialized discourse and racist expression.

Goldberg demonstrates that racial thinking is a function of the transforming categories and conceptions of social subjectivity throughout modernity.

He shows that rascisms are often not aberrant or irrational but consistent with prevailing social conceptions, particularly of the reasonable and the normal.

He shows too how this process is being extended and renewed by categories dominant in present day social sciences: "the West"; "the underclass"; and "the primitive".

This normalization of racism reflected in the West mirrors South Africa an its use and conception of space.

Goldberg concludes with an extended argument for a pragmatic, antiracist practice.

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Product Details
Wiley-Blackwell
0631180788 / 9780631180784
Paperback / softback
305.8
06/05/1993
United States
English
x, 313 pages
23 cm
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: 1993.