The Emotional Politics of Racism: How Feelings Trump Facts in an Era of Colorblindness (Stanford Studies in Comparative Race and Ethnicity)
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About This Book
With stop-and-frisk laws, new immigration policies, and cuts to social welfare programs, majorities in the United States have increasingly supported intensified forms of punishment and marginalization against Black, Latino, Arab and Muslim people in the United States, even as a majority of citizens claim to support "coloblindness" and racial equality. With this book, Paula Ioanide examines how emotion has prominently figured into these contemporary expressions of racial discrimination and violence, and how these widespread fears have played a central role in justifying the expansion of our military and prison system. But Ioanide also argues that within each of these cases there is an opportunity for new mobilizations, for ethical witnessing: we must also popularize desires for justice and increase people's receptivity to the testimonies of the oppressed by reorganizing embodied and unconscious structures of feeling. -- from back cover.
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