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E-grāmata: Key Concepts in Race and Ethnicity

  • Formāts: 176 pages
  • Sērija : Sage Key Concepts Series
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Jul-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Sage Publications Ltd
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781473906068
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  • Formāts: 176 pages
  • Sērija : Sage Key Concepts Series
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Jul-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Sage Publications Ltd
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781473906068
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"A conceptually power-packed volume that is at once erudite and accessible, expansive and focused, true to sociological traditions yet stimulatingly exploratory. Scholars and students will be served very well by this absorbing, far-reaching enquiry into ethnicity and race."
- Raymond Taras, Tulane University

“[ W]hat Meer offers with this distinctive new volume is a brief survey of the academic approach to key subjects in this area. For example, the entry titled ‘Racialisation’ opens with the provenance of the subject in the works of W. E. B. Du Bois and Frantz Fanon; then Meer traces debates about whether the concept can be projected back upon history... Meer offers in-depth coverage of 28 concepts, including ‘Citizenship,’ ‘Hybridity,’ ‘Intersectionality,’ ‘Post-colonialism,’ ‘Transnationalism,’ and more… Students wanting a guide into the deeper realms of academic theorizing on race and ethnicity will be well served.”
- G. A. Lancaster, Choice

This book offers an accessible discussion of both foundational and novel concepts in the study of race and ethnicity. Each account will help readers become familiar with how long standing and contemporary arguments within race and ethnicity studies contribute to our understanding of social and political life more broadly.


Providing an excellent starting point with which to understand the contemporary relevance of these concepts, Nasar Meer offers an up-to-date and engaging consideration of everyday examples from around the world.

This is an indispensable guide for both students and established researchers interested in the study of race and ethnicity.

Recenzijas

A conceptually power-packed volume that is at once erudite and accessible, expansive and focused, true to sociological traditions yet stimulatingly exploratory. Scholars and students will be served very well by this absorbing, far-reaching enquiry into ethnicity and race. -- Raymond Taras An excellent book both for those who are new to the study of race and ethnicity and for established scholars. It will no doubt be the text of choice on many courses and by many students. -- Tariq Modood A fresh and critical take on key concepts and ideas in the field of race and ethnicity. Nasar Meers account is a must for all students who are interested in deepening their understanding and it will become an important point of reference. -- John Solomos This concise, profound, and beautifully written book offers a tour de force across the landscape of race and ethnicity by a young author who masters them all. -- Per Mouritsen The scope of selection truly demonstrates the profound intersections of racial issues with everyday phenomena and the general ubiquity of racial politics... this book successfully outlines the dynamics of the field and provides an excellent account of key concepts of essential topics of race and ethnicity. Either as an engaging introduction to the discipline or a succinct reference to extend knowledge, the book is likely to appeal to a readership from within and beyond sociology; to undergraduates and researchers alike. -- Mengxi Pang, University of Glasgow

About the Author xi
Acknowledgements xii
Introduction 1(7)
Why a New Book on Race and Ethnicity?
1(1)
Carving Nature at its Joints
2(1)
Identity and Dispersion
3(2)
Reflexivity
5(1)
How to Use This Book
6(2)
Antisemitism
8(5)
The Object-Subject Distinction
8(1)
From Bigotry to Racism
9(1)
Hierarchies and the New Antisemitism
10(3)
Blackness
13(6)
An Etymology of Blackness
14(1)
Blackness as Double Consciousness
15(1)
Blackness as a Political Identity
16(1)
The Black Atlantic
17(2)
Citizenship
19(8)
The Challenge of Citizenship
19(1)
What the Greeks and Romans Did For Us
20(2)
Marshall and Beyond: Equality and Culture
22(1)
National and Post-National Citizenship
23(1)
Citizenship and New Social Movements
24(3)
Diaspora
27(4)
Co-ordinates of Diaspora
28(1)
Diasporas and Groups
29(1)
Diasporic Space
30(1)
Equalities and Inequalities
31(6)
Foot Races and Starting Lines
32(1)
Groups and Experiences
33(2)
Recognition and Redistribution
35(2)
Ethnicity
37(6)
Subjectivities and Primordialisms
38(1)
Ethnic Boundaries and Ethnic Assertiveness
38(2)
New and Old Ethnicities
40(1)
Boundaries and Drawbacks
41(2)
Euro-Islam
43(4)
Euro-Islam as a Multidirectional Process
43(2)
Euro-Islam as Muslim Adaptation
45(1)
Re-locating the Muslim Subject
46(1)
Health and Well-being
47(5)
Ethnicity and Health
47(1)
Disease and Categories
48(2)
Ethnic Variations
50(2)
Hybridity
52(3)
Hybridity as Translation
52(1)
Hybridity as Identity
53(2)
Integration
55(4)
Two Uses
55(1)
Diversity and Integration
56(1)
Integration as a Vortex Issue
57(2)
Interculturalism
59(5)
Communication Beyond Co-existence?
60(1)
Free from Cultural Groups
61(1)
A Stronger Sense of the Whole
62(1)
Illiberalism and Culture
63(1)
Intersectionality
64(5)
Structural or Political Intersectionality?
65(1)
Intra-Categorical, Anti-Categorical and Inter-Categorical
66(1)
Unitary, Multiple and Intersectional
67(2)
Islamophobia
69(6)
Challenges and Responses
70(2)
Intersectional Islamophobia: Gender and Civilisation
72(3)
Migration
75(5)
Recent Trends in Migration
76(1)
Three Ages of Mass Migration
76(2)
Theorising Migration
78(2)
Mixedness
80(3)
Mixedness as Population Change
80(1)
Mixedness as Racial Formation
81(2)
Multiculturalism
83(9)
A Philosophical Rationale
83(1)
Political Provenance(s)
84(1)
Intellectual Calibrations
85(3)
Known Knowns, Known Unknowns
88(1)
The Backlash and Beyond
89(3)
Nationalism
92(6)
Nationalism and the State
92(1)
What is a Nation?
93(1)
Imagined Communities
94(1)
Ethnies amd Pre-modernity
95(1)
The Bad and the Banal
96(2)
Orientalism
98(5)
Muslim Society
98(1)
A Style of Thought
99(2)
Neo-Orientalism?
101(2)
Political Participation
103(6)
The Function of Political Rights
104(2)
Political Participation as the Franchise
106(1)
Securing Representation
107(2)
Post-colonialism
109(4)
Post or Present?
110(1)
Politics, Culture or Both?
111(1)
Addressing or Ignoring the Post-Colonial?
112(1)
Race
113(6)
History and Categorisation
114(1)
A Biological Category
115(1)
Post-Race or the Paradox of Race?
116(3)
Race Relations
119(6)
Origins
120(1)
British Race Relations
121(1)
Six Orders of Race Relations
121(2)
Status and Party
123(2)
Racialisation
125(5)
Intellectual Provenances
125(1)
Historical Racialisation
126(1)
Contemporary Racialisation
127(1)
Positive Racialisation and Model Minorities
127(1)
Institutional Racisms
128(2)
Recognition
130(6)
The Range of Recognition
131(1)
Phenomenology and Ethics
131(1)
Critical Theory and Race
132(1)
Multicultural Turns
133(1)
Democratic Participation
134(1)
The Emergence of Misrecognition
134(2)
Secularism
136(8)
Contemporary Meanings
137(1)
Secularisation
137(1)
Secularism and State
138(1)
Secularism and Autonomy
139(2)
Secularism and Citizenship
141(1)
Post-Secularism
142(2)
Super-diversity
144(3)
A Concept for Our Time?
145(1)
What is New That is `Super'?
146(1)
Transnationalism
147(5)
The Conditions of Transnationalism
148(1)
Social Morphology and Consciousness
148(1)
Cultural Reproduction and Capital
149(1)
Political Engagement and Space
150(2)
Whiteness
152(7)
White or Western?
153(1)
Racial Supremacy and Privilege
154(1)
Class and Negotiating Identity
155(4)
Index 159
Dr Nasar Meer is Professor of Sociology in the School of Social and Political Sciences and former Director of RACE.ED at the University of Edinburgh.

He is Co-Investigator of The Impacts of the Pandemic on Ethnic and Racialized Groups in the UK (UKRI, 2021-2023) and Principal Investigator of the Governance and Local Integration of Migrants and Europes Refugees (GLIMER) (JPI ERA Net / Horizon-2020).

He was a Commissioner on the Royal Society of Edinburghs (2020-2021) Post-COVID-19 Futures Inquiry, a Member of the Scottish Government COVID-19 and Ethnicity Expert Reference Group and the British Councils Outreach Program, and formerly elected co-Chair of Young Academy of Scotland (YAS), and elected Trustee of the British Sociological Association (BSA) and the Social Policy Association (SPA).  

He is an elected Fellow of the UK Academy of Social Sciences (FAcSS), a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh (FRSE), and Trustee of the Stuart Hall Foundation.

He is Series Editor of New Approaches to Sociology (SAGE); co-Editor of Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power; co-Editor of 21st Century Standpoints (BSA and Policy Press) and co-Editor of Palgrave Politics of Identity and Citizenship Series (PPICS).