Description
Affectivity and Race
Studies from Nordic Contexts
Authors: Andreassen Rikke, Vitus Kathrine
Language: EnglishKeywords
Young Man; Collaborative Autoethnography; Berlingske Tidende; White European Subjects; Antiimmigrant Movements; Ekstra Bladet; Baker’s Body; Mixed Race Body; Helga Crane; Military Junta; Swedish Higher Education; Racial Grammar; Southern USA; Islamist Terror Threat; Partner Migration; White Spaces; Fieldwork Situation; Racial Embodiment; Anti-immigrant Movement; Swedish Academia; Josephine Baker; Muhammad Cartoons; Jussi Halla Aho; Muslim Perpetrator; Dangerous Brown Men
Approximative price 48.88 €
In Print (Delivery period: 14 days).
Add to cart the book of Andreassen Rikke, Vitus KathrinePublication date: 06-2020
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Paperback
Approximative price 164.74 €
In Print (Delivery period: 14 days).
Add to cart the book of Andreassen Rikke, Vitus KathrinePublication date: 10-2015
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Hardback
Description
/li>Contents
/li>Biography
/li>
Introduction: affectivity as a lens to racial formations in the Nordic countries, Kathrine Vitus and Rikke Andreassen. Part I How is Race Politicised through Affects?: Politics of irony as the emerging sensibility of the anti-immigrant debate, Kaarina Nikunen; If it had been a muslim: affectivity and race in Danish journalists’ reflections on making news on terror, Asta Smedegaard Nielsen; The racial grammar of Swedish higher education and research policy: the limits and conditions of researching race in a colour-blind context, Tobias Hübinette and Paula Mählck. Part II How Does Race Produce Affects?: ‘And then we do it in Norway’: learning leadership through affective contact zones, Kirsten Hvenegård-Lassen and Dorthe Staunæs; Nordic colour-blindness and Nella Larsen, Rikke Andreassen; Disturbance and celebration of Josephine Baker in Copenhagen 1928: emotional constructions of whiteness, Marlene Spanger. Part III How is Race Affectively Experienced?: Feeling at loss: affect, whiteness and masculinity in the immediate aftermath of Norway’s terror, Stine H. Bang Svendsen; The affectivity of racism: enjoyment and disgust in young people’s film, Kathrine Vitus; Two journeys into research on difference in a Nordic context: a collaborative auto-ethnography, Henry Mainsah and Lin Prøitz; Doing ‘feelwork’: reflections on whiteness and methodological challenges in research on queer partner migration, Sara Ahlstedt. Index.