
The Everyday Language of White Racism
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The Everyday Language of White Racism
About this book
A groundbreaking critical discourse analysis of everyday language, reveals the underlying racist stereotypes circulating in American culture
In The Everyday Language of White Racism, prominent linguist Jane H. Hill provides an incisive analysis of the relationship between language, race, and culture. First published in 2008, this classic textbook employs an innovative framework to reveal the underlying racist stereotypes that continue to persist in White American culture and sustain structures of White Supremacy. Detailed yet accessible chapters integrate a broad range of literature from across disciplines, including sociology, social psychology, critical legal studies, anthropology, and sociolinguistics. Throughout the book, students are encouraged to engage with the linguistic data available through observation of racialized communication in their everyday lives.
Edited by a team of leading scholars, the second edition of The Everyday Language of White Racism brings Hill's contributions to the study of racism into conversation with the most current literature on language and racism in the United States. Topics such as racial profiling, police violence, the Black Lives Matter movement, White nationalism, White fragility, and various forms of institutional racism are addressed within Hill's broader framework of White racial projects and the "White folk" theory of race and racism. New chapter-by-chapter annotations clarify and contextualize theoretical concepts, accompanied by new discussion questions that offer guidance for analytical conversations in classrooms.
- Provides resources for critical discussions on contemporary racial issues that continue to limit and endanger BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Color) individuals and communities
- Dispels the common assumption that White racism is fading in the US and the Western world
- Illustrates how racist effects can be produced in interaction without any single person intending discrimination
- Contains an overview of the theory of race and racism, with definitions of terms and concepts
- Includes recent statistical data on U.S. racial gaps across a variety of categories and access to a companion website with additional resources
The Everyday Language of White Racism, Second Edition remains an indispensable resource for undergraduate and graduate students in Critical Race Studies and Linguistic Anthropology courses across the Humanities and Social Sciences.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Series Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication Page
- Contents
- Editorsâ Acknowledgments
- Editorsâ Preface to the Second Edition
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- About the Companion Website
- Chapter 1 The Persistence of White Racism
- Chapter 2 Language in White Racism: An Overview
- Chapter 3 The Social Life of Slurs
- Chapter 4 Gaffes: Racist Talk Without Racists
- Chapter 5 Covert Racist Discourse: Metaphors, Mocking, and the Racialization of Historically Spanish-speaking Populations in the United States
- Chapter 6 Linguistic Appropriation: The History of White Racism Is Embedded in American English
- Chapter 7 Everyday Language, White Racist Culture, Respect, and Civility
- Notes
- The Social Life of Slurs Revisited
- Cosmopolitan Affectations, Codeswitching Ideologies, and Counterfeit Immigrants in the Hilaria Baldwin âCucumberâ Affaira
- The Possibilities and Perils of Mock Spanish
- Linguistic Appropriation: Admiration, Hatred, and Exploitation in Racial Relief
- Introduction: In Honorific Tribute to Jane H. Hill
- Two Original American Sins: The Birth of Racism in the United States
- Linguistic Castigation and Demeaning Racial Appropriation
- Further Evidence of Hatred in America Based on Race
- References
- Index
- EULA