ABSTRACT

Trumpism and the racially implied Islamophobia of the "travel ban"; Brexit and the yearning for Britain’s past imperial grandeur; Black Lives Matter; the public backlash against Merkel’s refugee policies in Germany. These seemingly national responses to the changing demographics in a multitude of Western nations need to be understood as effects of a global/transnational crisis of whiteness.

The Intersections of Whiteness brings together scholars from different disciplines to shed light on these manifestations in the United States, the United Kingdom, South Africa and Germany. Applying methodology stemming from critical race theory’s investment in intersectionality, the contributions of this edited collection focus on specific intersections of whiteness with gender, class, space, affect and nationality.

Offering valuable insights into the contours of whiteness and its instrumentalisation across different nations, societies and cultures, this incisive volume creates transnational dialogue and will appeal to students and researchers interested in fields such as critical whiteness and race studies, gender studies, cultural studies and social policy.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

part I|2 pages

White epistemologies

chapter 1|19 pages

For the common good

Re-inscribing white normalcy into the American body politic

chapter 2|15 pages

A typology of white people in America

chapter 3|15 pages

“I wouldn’t say I’m a feminist”

Whiteness, “post-feminism,” and the American cultural imaginary

part II|2 pages

Whiteness and global politics

chapter 6|20 pages

White supremacy in the Trump era

University students and alt-right activism on college campuses

part III|2 pages

White affects

chapter 7|19 pages

“Anyone foreign?”

127Whiteness, passing, and deportability in Brexit Britain

chapter 8|17 pages

‘Afrikaner women’ and strategies of whiteness in postapartheid South Africa

Shame and the ethnicised respectability of ordentlikheid

part IV|2 pages

White(ning) spaces