Global Historical Sociology of Race and Racism

Alexandre I.R. White|Katrina Quisumbing King
Emerald
Emerald

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Paperback / softback
9781801172219
15 March 2024
£39.99
Hardback
9781801172196
30 September 2021
£83.99
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9781801172189
30 September 2021
£80.00
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9781801172202
30 September 2021
£80.00

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  • Description
  • Contents
  • About

In this volume of Political Power and Social Theory, a special collection of papers reconsiders race and racism from global and historical perspectives. Together, these articles serve as an entry point for sharpening our sociological understandings of how racism operates in current times. They address questions such as: What can a new agenda for the global historical sociology of race and racism lend to the existing scholarship? What would it mean to recover the globally constituted forces that have shaped the production of racial categories and dynamics of racial oppression? How can we understand domestic racial policies, not only through their effects on local populations, but also as products of wider global and transnational forces, knowledges, and transformations?

In short, what would re-historicizing the history of racism mean for sociological theorizing on the subject in the 21st century? Drawing on empirical analyses of the relations, mechanisms, machinations, and structures of racial supremacies, this volume generates productive avenues for future thinking on race and racism. It sets the agenda for a new generation of scholars interested in sociological questions of race, imperial forms, and the construction of modernity.

Chapter 1. Introduction: Towards a Global Historical Sociology of Race and Racism; Katrina Quisumbing King and Alexandre I.R. White

  • Chapter 2. Empire and Racialization: Reinterpreting Japan’s Pan-Asianism from a Du Boisian Perspective; Kazuko Suzuki
  • Chapter 3. Race and the Diplomatic Bureaucracy: State-Building in Nineteenth-Century Bolivia as a Response to Transnational Racialization Threats; Marcelo Bohrt
  • Chapter 4. Abolition as a Racial Project: Erasures and Racializations on the Borders of British India; Mishal Khan
  • Chapter 5. Race, Nation, and Resistance to State Symbolic Power in Rwanda Since the 1994 Genocide; Aliza Luft and Susan Thomson
  • Chapter 6. Seeing African and Indigenous States and Societies: Decolonizing and De-grouping Race Scholarships’ Narratives of Conquest and Enslavement in the Early Modern Atlantic World; Luisa Farah Schwartzman
  • Chapter 7. On the Ecomateriality of Racial-Colonial Domination in Rhode Island; Michael Murphy
  • Chapter 8. Colonial and Decolonial Resignification: U.S. Empire-State Sovereignty in Hawai‘i; Heidi Nicholls
  • Chapter 9. The Ghost in the Algorithm: Racial Colonial Capitalism and the Digital Age; Ricarda Hammer and Tina Park

Alexandre I.R. White is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology and the Department of the History of Medicine at Johns Hopkins University and School of Medicine.

Katrina Quisumbing King is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at Northwestern University.