| Paul Gilroy - 1991 - 284 pagini
...example, it simply does not apply in the English/British case. The politics of 'race' in this country is fired by conceptions of national belonging and...but rely on that very ambiguity for their effect. Phrases like 'the Island Race' and 'the Bulldog Breed' vividly convey the manner in which this nation... | |
| Houston A. Baker (Jr.), Manthia Diawara, Ruth H. Lindeborg - 1996 - 360 pagini
...criminal alienage, on the other. "The politics of 'race' in [Britain] is fired," according to Gilroy, "by conceptions of national belonging and homogeneity...but rely on that very ambiguity for their effect" (1991, 45). The black British cultural studies posture on racism and nationalism therefore stands in... | |
| Houston A. Baker (Jr.), Manthia Diawara, Ruth H. Lindeborg - 1996 - 184 pagini
...criminal alienage, on the other. "The politics of 'race' in [Britain] is fired," according to Gilroy, "by conceptions of national belonging and homogeneity which not only blur the distinction between 2. Williams quoted in Gilroy 1991,50. 'race' and nation, but rely on that very ambiguity for their... | |
| Randy Martin - 1998 - 284 pagini
...observation seems consistent with Paul Gilroy's claim that "the politics of 'race' in this country is fired by conceptions of national belonging and...nation, but rely on that very ambiguity for their effect ." 18 As in other articulations of culture and political economy, the United States appears to follow... | |
| Fiona E. Leach, Angela Little - 1999 - 428 pagini
...argues, race remains at the centre of contemporary British politics: The politics of race in this country is fired by conceptions of national belonging and...but rely on that very ambiguity for their effect. The new racism is primarily concerned with mechanisms of inclusion and exclusion; it specifies who... | |
| Alfred J. Lopez - 2012 - 274 pagini
...through a sense of 'race' " (Gilroy 1993, 22-23). Indeed, [t]he politics of "race" in this country is fired by conceptions of national belonging and...but rely on that very ambiguity for their effect. Phrases like "the Island Race" and the "the Bulldog Breed" vividly convey the manner in which this... | |
| Virinder Kalra, Raminder Kaur, John Hutnyk - 2005 - 172 pagini
...works of Paul Gilroy. In an analysis of 'new racism', Gilroy argues that both left and right rely on conceptions of national belonging and homogeneity...but rely 'on that very ambiguity for their effect ... the nation is represented in both biological and cultural terms' (Gilroy 1987: 45). The concept... | |
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