Alana Lentin | Western Sydney University (original) (raw)

Papers by Alana Lentin

Research paper thumbnail of The Crises of Multiculturalism: Racism in a Neoliberal Age

Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews, 2013

tory of qualitative sociology includes several projects with similar goals, whereby scholars pres... more tory of qualitative sociology includes several projects with similar goals, whereby scholars present alternatives to mainstream ways of conducting social analysis. These include Harold Garfinkel’s ethnomethodolgy, Dorothy Smith’s work on feminist standpoint theory, Glaser and Strauss’ grounded theory, and Michael Burawoy’s extended case method. However, in each of the latter cases, the authors exemplified the application and utility of their paradigms with comprehensive elaborations of their approach, ones now regarded as archetypes of well-crafted social analysis. In contrast, because this book is more intellectually wedded to philosophical analysis (teaching by telling) and less immersed in field research (teaching by showing), its presentation is less capable of convincing confused or skeptical readers of CR’s value and aesthetic appeal. Consequently, the description of the CR approach and its application to social research generally and migration studies more specifically remains abstract, stressing general principles for conducting research and analysis rather than demonstrating concrete techniques that researchers can readily apply in topics of their own choosing. While the author courageously criticizes many of the most influential social theorists associated with qualitative methods, including Foucault, Blumer, and Goffman, his reliance on secondary sources rather than original texts as the basis of his critiques tends to undermine his arguments. Moreover, the book’s key points are often expressed in lengthy quotes from the writings of other CR scholars rather than in the author’s own words. This makes the discussion less direct and less powerful than it might have been otherwise. Finally, the quality of the book’s copy editing is sloppy, revealing frequent misspellings and making portions of the text incomprehensible. Many works cited in the text do not appear in the bibliography. In sum, Qualitative Methods in Migration Studies: A Critical Realist Perspective introduces readers to a new approach to social research and immigration studies. Its high level of abstraction, lack of in-depth applications, and dearth of specific techniques that can be readily applied to on-going projects means that readers may encounter challenges as they attempt to apply the book’s lessons to their own research.

Research paper thumbnail of Introduction: Speaking of Racism

It has never been easy, but speaking about racism in the western political climate of the first d... more It has never been easy, but speaking about racism in the western political climate of the first decade of the twenty-first century is more difficult than ever before. There is a feeling in post-colonial and post-immigration societies that the blatant, overt racism of the past is no longer as ...

Research paper thumbnail of Islamophobia, race and the attack on antiracism: Gavan Titley and Alana Lentin in conversation

French Cultural Studies, Jul 16, 2021

In our work together, going back to the mid-2000s, we have always felt that it was impossible to ... more In our work together, going back to the mid-2000s, we have always felt that it was impossible to engage fully with the ever circulating, scavenger nature of race and racism from the narrow Anglo-American vantage point that often predominates and orients public and scholarly discussions. Especially, when attempting to think with and against race in Europe and to excavate the attempts to ‘bury it alive’ we always attempted to seek out the parallels and overlaps between contexts that attempted to portray themselves as distinct, mirroring indeed the sedimentation created by a politics of race. Reading race in France, and in particular over the last two decades Islamophobia, has been central to that work in common. In this conversation, we reflect on debates on race, coloniality and the spectre of ‘Islamo-leftism’ in the France of 2020–2021, against the backdrop of both a global pandemic and a worldwide movement against racial violence. Through this dialogue, we think about what has changed, and what remains the same, ending with a recognition of the international importance of decolonial and political antiracist politics in France and the energy they inspire in the face of the most reactionary of forces.

Research paper thumbnail of Racism and sociology

Lit eBooks, 2014

Contents: Wulf D. Hund: Racism in White Sociology. From Adam Smith to Max Weber - Alana Lentin: P... more Contents: Wulf D. Hund: Racism in White Sociology. From Adam Smith to Max Weber - Alana Lentin: Postracial Silences. The Othering of Race in Europe - Felix Losing: From the Congo to Chicago. Robert E. Park's Romance with Racism - Les Back, Maggie Tate: Telling About Racism. W.E.B. Du Bois, Stuart Hall and Sociology's Reconstruction - Barnor He

Research paper thumbnail of Racism, Anti-Racism and the Western State

Identity, Belonging and Migration

This chapter, written by Alana Lentin, is the first discussion in the second section of the text,... more This chapter, written by Alana Lentin, is the first discussion in the second section of the text, titled ‘Institutional Forms of Discrimination’. It assesses the implications of the adoption of various anti-racist stances by European states in the post World War II context; drawing out a range of issues associated with the paradox of anti-racist states that are maintained and legitimated by nationalist discourse.

Research paper thumbnail of La oss snakke om kulturen din: post-rase, post-rasisme

Research paper thumbnail of The Crises of Multiculturalism

Research paper thumbnail of Antiracism apps: framing understandings and approaches to antiracism education and intervention

Information, Communication & Society, 2016

Research paper thumbnail of More Proof, If Proof Were Needed: Spectacles of Secular Insistence, Multicultural Failure, and the Contemporary Laundering of Racism

Transformations of Religion and the Public Sphere, 2014

Innocence of Muslims is a trailer in search of its film, featuring actors in search of their role... more Innocence of Muslims is a trailer in search of its film, featuring actors in search of their roles, directed by a propagandist sought by the FBI. It did eventually find its audiences, active audiences that could, in many instances, act on it without having seen it. If this kind of reaction is usually held up as evidence of censorious ignorance, in this instance it was merely adequate to the form, as the globally circulated trailer was conceived with relatively firm expectations of its viewers and witnesses. Posted on YouTube during July 2012 by Nakoula Basseley Nakoula — an Egyptian-American Coptic Christian who used the pseudonym ‘Sam Bacile’ — what has become known as the Innocence of Muslims exists for the vast majority of its audience as a 14-minute pastiche, The Real Life of Muhammad, a ‘trailer’ for an unverified full-length movie called The Innocence of Bin Laden allegedly screened in Hollywood during June 2012.

Research paper thumbnail of More Proof, If Proof Were Needed

Transformations of Religion and the Public Sphere

Research paper thumbnail of The crisis of ‘multiculturalism’ in Europe: Mediated minarets, intolerable subjects

European Journal of Cultural Studies, 2012

During the last decade, European countries have declared a ‘crisis’ of multiculturalism. This cri... more During the last decade, European countries have declared a ‘crisis’ of multiculturalism. This crisis has gained significant political traction, despite the empirical absence of a failed experiment with multiculturalism. This introduction focuses on the narrative of multicultural backlash, which purports that ‘parallel societies’ and ‘intolerable subjects’ and practices have been allowed to flourish within European societies. Beyond particular contexts, the problem of intolerable subjects is seen as a shared European challenge, requiring disintegrated migrants and Muslim populations to display loyalty, adopt ‘our’ values, and prove the legitimacy of their belonging. This introduction critiques multicultural backlash, less as a rejection of piecemeal multicultural policies than as a denial of lived multiculture. This is developed through an examination of racism in a post-racial era, and by analysing the ways in which integrationist projects further embed culturalist ontology.

Research paper thumbnail of The Politics of Diversity In Europe

Research paper thumbnail of Post-racialisme, déni du racisme et crise de la blanchité ("Postracialism", racist denial and white crisis) - SociologieS

SociologieS, 2019

En interrogeant la tendance post-raciale à la despécification du racisme par la prolifération d’e... more En interrogeant la tendance post-raciale à la despécification du racisme par la prolifération d’expériences minorées, l’article propose d’analyser, dans une perspective de théorie critique, comment l’« éliminativisme racial » qui sous-tend les projets post-racialistes, a cristallisé en des formes particulières de déni racial que nous étudions à travers la figure contemporaine du non-racisme. À la différence de l’anti-racialisme qui discute la pertinence des catégorisations raciales comme facteur d’analyse sociale et politique, le non-racisme se caractérise par une manière de (re)définir le racisme qui met à distance ou « déréalise » la race en tant que, à la fois, phénomène historique et expérience vécue, d’une part ; s’ancre sur la primauté de perspectives morales, d’autre part. Trois facettes seront plus particulièrement étudiées : l’opposition postulée entre race et classe ; l’« inutilité » contemporaine présumée du racisme comme schème explicatif ; l’antiracisme comme un combat des « élites ».

Focussing on the postracial drive to undermine racism through its purported universalization, the paper is aimed at analyzing, from a critical race studies perspective, how the ‘racial eliminativist’ demands, that underlie postracialist projects, paradoxically, crystallize into new forms of racial deniability, which I study through the contemporary expressions of ‘not racism’. Thus the argument is not about the existence of race as a factor determining social and political relations, hence ‘anti-racialism’, but rather about the establishment of definitions of racism that either sideline or deny race both as an historical phenomenon and as experienced by racialised people, on the one hand ; push for a dominant interpretation of racism as a moral one which sutures it to assessments of individual character, on the other hand. Three key facets of this ‘not racism’ will be put under scrutiny : the tendency to oppose race and class ; the alleged ‘unhelpfulness’ of racism; and the so called ‘elitism’ of antiracism.

Research paper thumbnail of Identities Global Studies in Culture and Power Looking as white: anti-racism apps, appearance and racialized embodiment

Identities, 2019

Smartphone apps for anti-racism education and intervention are being devel- oped by organisations... more Smartphone apps for anti-racism education and intervention are being devel- oped by organisations in various countries. The ubiquity of smartphone use and app methodology, as Grant argues, have the potential to disrupt racial knowl- edges and facilitate anti-racist action. I use Nicholas Mirzoeff’s ‘zones of appear- ance and non-appearance’ and Derek Hook’s discussion of ‘racialising embodiment’ to discuss the potential of one such app, Everyday Racism, to challenge and disrupt white supremacy. The Australian-based app uses gamifica- tion to encourage users to participate in ‘bystander anti-racism’. However, by failing to question the neutrality of the default white bystander, the app risks reproducing hegemonic constellations of white agency versus racialized inaction. I argue that, in the zone of appearance, it is not enough to make racism apparent. It is necessary to appear. To appear first requires exposing nonappearance including the role even of the well-intentioned in maintaining it.

Research paper thumbnail of Je Suis Juif_Lentin.pdf

‘Je Suis Juif’: Charlie Hebdo and the remaking of antisemitism, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of Charlie Hebdo: White Context and Black Analytics, Public Culture

Public Culture, 2019

The call for a parsing of the French context that accompanied the aftermath of the attacks on the... more The call for a parsing of the French context that accompanied the aftermath of the attacks on the satirical French magazine Charlie Hebdo mobilized what Barnor Hesse calls a “white analytics.” Such a partial vision of France as “exceptional” in matters of race denies the significance of “black analytics” for a full understanding of the context leading up to the Charlie Hebdo “event.” “White analytics” permits the universalization of racism and the suggestion that “reverse racism” or “Islamic leftism” are now dominant. In contrast, attention to the work of scholars and activists who shed light on race and ongoing coloniality in France is vital for the significant challenges of the present to be fully understood, paving the way for a renewal of a radical “political antiracism.”

Research paper thumbnail of Beyond denial: 'not racism' as racist violence

While the idea that racism is accompanied by its denial is well established, this paper examines ... more While the idea that racism is accompanied by its denial is well established, this paper examines the widespread explicit advocacy of a stance of ‘not racism’. The rejection of racism by proponents of positions that hinder the cause of racial justice is the discursive next step in ‘postracial’ racism. I examine the various ways in which racism has been proposed to be an ‘unhelpful’ framework. I make the case that the dominant position within philosophy of race that racism is, first and foremost, a moral failing has unwittingly contributed to the emergence of ‘not racism’ as a dominant expression in race thinking today. Following an examination of several key moral philosophical analyses of racism, I illustrate my argument that ‘not racism’ is a form of racist violence with reference to several recent and contemporary cases against the backdrop of the rise of ‘Global Trumpism’.

Research paper thumbnail of Not Doing Race in Australia

This paper examines the themes of 'casual racism', 'bystander antiracism' and 'ordinariness' in s... more This paper examines the themes of 'casual racism', 'bystander antiracism' and 'ordinariness' in some recent scholarship on racism in Australia. I argue that these approaches acknowledge, but fail to engage deeply, with the legacies of colonialism and black subjugation for understandings of racism today, and that they rely on a centering of 'white comfort' as a strategy of antiracism. In contrast, the paper reflects on elements of Black thought in order to decentre such 'white analytics', making the case that 'thinking blackly' about race and racism in Australia would bring about what Lewis Gordon calls more truthful, and hence more politically useful, accounts.

Research paper thumbnail of The 'Crisis of Multiculturalism' and the Global Politics of Trumpism

My contribution to the Sociological Review #Election2016 blog series.

Research paper thumbnail of Antiracism apps: framing understandings and approaches to antiracism education and intervention

Mobile apps for antiracism have become valuable pedagogical and activist tools for their real-tim... more Mobile apps for antiracism have become valuable pedagogical and activist tools for their real-time and mapping capabilities, their portability and intimate bodily presence, which enables a reaction exactly when an act of racism occurs. In this article, five mobile apps aimed at producing antiracism education or intervention outcomes from the United Kingdom, Australia and France are the focus of an interrogation of the ways in which racism and antiracism are framed and the strengths and weaknesses of these initiatives for countering dominant forms of everyday racism. We identify a number of different approaches to racism and antiracism in our inquiry, which lead to particular sets of aims, features and uses: the app as a tool for capturing, reporting and responding to racist acts; as a way of reinforcing a wider sense of community identity and solidarity; to demonstrate racism, especially Islamophobia, and make its forms visible, and as a means for challenging racism through raising awareness and encouraging bystanders to oppose it. We argue that while these apps are well disposed to exposing and manifesting isolated incidents of racism in everyday life, we question their potential for transformative societal outcomes beyond the level of unilateral action in the context of events experienced as unique incidents.

Research paper thumbnail of The Crises of Multiculturalism: Racism in a Neoliberal Age

Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews, 2013

tory of qualitative sociology includes several projects with similar goals, whereby scholars pres... more tory of qualitative sociology includes several projects with similar goals, whereby scholars present alternatives to mainstream ways of conducting social analysis. These include Harold Garfinkel’s ethnomethodolgy, Dorothy Smith’s work on feminist standpoint theory, Glaser and Strauss’ grounded theory, and Michael Burawoy’s extended case method. However, in each of the latter cases, the authors exemplified the application and utility of their paradigms with comprehensive elaborations of their approach, ones now regarded as archetypes of well-crafted social analysis. In contrast, because this book is more intellectually wedded to philosophical analysis (teaching by telling) and less immersed in field research (teaching by showing), its presentation is less capable of convincing confused or skeptical readers of CR’s value and aesthetic appeal. Consequently, the description of the CR approach and its application to social research generally and migration studies more specifically remains abstract, stressing general principles for conducting research and analysis rather than demonstrating concrete techniques that researchers can readily apply in topics of their own choosing. While the author courageously criticizes many of the most influential social theorists associated with qualitative methods, including Foucault, Blumer, and Goffman, his reliance on secondary sources rather than original texts as the basis of his critiques tends to undermine his arguments. Moreover, the book’s key points are often expressed in lengthy quotes from the writings of other CR scholars rather than in the author’s own words. This makes the discussion less direct and less powerful than it might have been otherwise. Finally, the quality of the book’s copy editing is sloppy, revealing frequent misspellings and making portions of the text incomprehensible. Many works cited in the text do not appear in the bibliography. In sum, Qualitative Methods in Migration Studies: A Critical Realist Perspective introduces readers to a new approach to social research and immigration studies. Its high level of abstraction, lack of in-depth applications, and dearth of specific techniques that can be readily applied to on-going projects means that readers may encounter challenges as they attempt to apply the book’s lessons to their own research.

Research paper thumbnail of Introduction: Speaking of Racism

It has never been easy, but speaking about racism in the western political climate of the first d... more It has never been easy, but speaking about racism in the western political climate of the first decade of the twenty-first century is more difficult than ever before. There is a feeling in post-colonial and post-immigration societies that the blatant, overt racism of the past is no longer as ...

Research paper thumbnail of Islamophobia, race and the attack on antiracism: Gavan Titley and Alana Lentin in conversation

French Cultural Studies, Jul 16, 2021

In our work together, going back to the mid-2000s, we have always felt that it was impossible to ... more In our work together, going back to the mid-2000s, we have always felt that it was impossible to engage fully with the ever circulating, scavenger nature of race and racism from the narrow Anglo-American vantage point that often predominates and orients public and scholarly discussions. Especially, when attempting to think with and against race in Europe and to excavate the attempts to ‘bury it alive’ we always attempted to seek out the parallels and overlaps between contexts that attempted to portray themselves as distinct, mirroring indeed the sedimentation created by a politics of race. Reading race in France, and in particular over the last two decades Islamophobia, has been central to that work in common. In this conversation, we reflect on debates on race, coloniality and the spectre of ‘Islamo-leftism’ in the France of 2020–2021, against the backdrop of both a global pandemic and a worldwide movement against racial violence. Through this dialogue, we think about what has changed, and what remains the same, ending with a recognition of the international importance of decolonial and political antiracist politics in France and the energy they inspire in the face of the most reactionary of forces.

Research paper thumbnail of Racism and sociology

Lit eBooks, 2014

Contents: Wulf D. Hund: Racism in White Sociology. From Adam Smith to Max Weber - Alana Lentin: P... more Contents: Wulf D. Hund: Racism in White Sociology. From Adam Smith to Max Weber - Alana Lentin: Postracial Silences. The Othering of Race in Europe - Felix Losing: From the Congo to Chicago. Robert E. Park's Romance with Racism - Les Back, Maggie Tate: Telling About Racism. W.E.B. Du Bois, Stuart Hall and Sociology's Reconstruction - Barnor He

Research paper thumbnail of Racism, Anti-Racism and the Western State

Identity, Belonging and Migration

This chapter, written by Alana Lentin, is the first discussion in the second section of the text,... more This chapter, written by Alana Lentin, is the first discussion in the second section of the text, titled ‘Institutional Forms of Discrimination’. It assesses the implications of the adoption of various anti-racist stances by European states in the post World War II context; drawing out a range of issues associated with the paradox of anti-racist states that are maintained and legitimated by nationalist discourse.

Research paper thumbnail of La oss snakke om kulturen din: post-rase, post-rasisme

Research paper thumbnail of The Crises of Multiculturalism

Research paper thumbnail of Antiracism apps: framing understandings and approaches to antiracism education and intervention

Information, Communication & Society, 2016

Research paper thumbnail of More Proof, If Proof Were Needed: Spectacles of Secular Insistence, Multicultural Failure, and the Contemporary Laundering of Racism

Transformations of Religion and the Public Sphere, 2014

Innocence of Muslims is a trailer in search of its film, featuring actors in search of their role... more Innocence of Muslims is a trailer in search of its film, featuring actors in search of their roles, directed by a propagandist sought by the FBI. It did eventually find its audiences, active audiences that could, in many instances, act on it without having seen it. If this kind of reaction is usually held up as evidence of censorious ignorance, in this instance it was merely adequate to the form, as the globally circulated trailer was conceived with relatively firm expectations of its viewers and witnesses. Posted on YouTube during July 2012 by Nakoula Basseley Nakoula — an Egyptian-American Coptic Christian who used the pseudonym ‘Sam Bacile’ — what has become known as the Innocence of Muslims exists for the vast majority of its audience as a 14-minute pastiche, The Real Life of Muhammad, a ‘trailer’ for an unverified full-length movie called The Innocence of Bin Laden allegedly screened in Hollywood during June 2012.

Research paper thumbnail of More Proof, If Proof Were Needed

Transformations of Religion and the Public Sphere

Research paper thumbnail of The crisis of ‘multiculturalism’ in Europe: Mediated minarets, intolerable subjects

European Journal of Cultural Studies, 2012

During the last decade, European countries have declared a ‘crisis’ of multiculturalism. This cri... more During the last decade, European countries have declared a ‘crisis’ of multiculturalism. This crisis has gained significant political traction, despite the empirical absence of a failed experiment with multiculturalism. This introduction focuses on the narrative of multicultural backlash, which purports that ‘parallel societies’ and ‘intolerable subjects’ and practices have been allowed to flourish within European societies. Beyond particular contexts, the problem of intolerable subjects is seen as a shared European challenge, requiring disintegrated migrants and Muslim populations to display loyalty, adopt ‘our’ values, and prove the legitimacy of their belonging. This introduction critiques multicultural backlash, less as a rejection of piecemeal multicultural policies than as a denial of lived multiculture. This is developed through an examination of racism in a post-racial era, and by analysing the ways in which integrationist projects further embed culturalist ontology.

Research paper thumbnail of The Politics of Diversity In Europe

Research paper thumbnail of Post-racialisme, déni du racisme et crise de la blanchité ("Postracialism", racist denial and white crisis) - SociologieS

SociologieS, 2019

En interrogeant la tendance post-raciale à la despécification du racisme par la prolifération d’e... more En interrogeant la tendance post-raciale à la despécification du racisme par la prolifération d’expériences minorées, l’article propose d’analyser, dans une perspective de théorie critique, comment l’« éliminativisme racial » qui sous-tend les projets post-racialistes, a cristallisé en des formes particulières de déni racial que nous étudions à travers la figure contemporaine du non-racisme. À la différence de l’anti-racialisme qui discute la pertinence des catégorisations raciales comme facteur d’analyse sociale et politique, le non-racisme se caractérise par une manière de (re)définir le racisme qui met à distance ou « déréalise » la race en tant que, à la fois, phénomène historique et expérience vécue, d’une part ; s’ancre sur la primauté de perspectives morales, d’autre part. Trois facettes seront plus particulièrement étudiées : l’opposition postulée entre race et classe ; l’« inutilité » contemporaine présumée du racisme comme schème explicatif ; l’antiracisme comme un combat des « élites ».

Focussing on the postracial drive to undermine racism through its purported universalization, the paper is aimed at analyzing, from a critical race studies perspective, how the ‘racial eliminativist’ demands, that underlie postracialist projects, paradoxically, crystallize into new forms of racial deniability, which I study through the contemporary expressions of ‘not racism’. Thus the argument is not about the existence of race as a factor determining social and political relations, hence ‘anti-racialism’, but rather about the establishment of definitions of racism that either sideline or deny race both as an historical phenomenon and as experienced by racialised people, on the one hand ; push for a dominant interpretation of racism as a moral one which sutures it to assessments of individual character, on the other hand. Three key facets of this ‘not racism’ will be put under scrutiny : the tendency to oppose race and class ; the alleged ‘unhelpfulness’ of racism; and the so called ‘elitism’ of antiracism.

Research paper thumbnail of Identities Global Studies in Culture and Power Looking as white: anti-racism apps, appearance and racialized embodiment

Identities, 2019

Smartphone apps for anti-racism education and intervention are being devel- oped by organisations... more Smartphone apps for anti-racism education and intervention are being devel- oped by organisations in various countries. The ubiquity of smartphone use and app methodology, as Grant argues, have the potential to disrupt racial knowl- edges and facilitate anti-racist action. I use Nicholas Mirzoeff’s ‘zones of appear- ance and non-appearance’ and Derek Hook’s discussion of ‘racialising embodiment’ to discuss the potential of one such app, Everyday Racism, to challenge and disrupt white supremacy. The Australian-based app uses gamifica- tion to encourage users to participate in ‘bystander anti-racism’. However, by failing to question the neutrality of the default white bystander, the app risks reproducing hegemonic constellations of white agency versus racialized inaction. I argue that, in the zone of appearance, it is not enough to make racism apparent. It is necessary to appear. To appear first requires exposing nonappearance including the role even of the well-intentioned in maintaining it.

Research paper thumbnail of Je Suis Juif_Lentin.pdf

‘Je Suis Juif’: Charlie Hebdo and the remaking of antisemitism, 2017

Research paper thumbnail of Charlie Hebdo: White Context and Black Analytics, Public Culture

Public Culture, 2019

The call for a parsing of the French context that accompanied the aftermath of the attacks on the... more The call for a parsing of the French context that accompanied the aftermath of the attacks on the satirical French magazine Charlie Hebdo mobilized what Barnor Hesse calls a “white analytics.” Such a partial vision of France as “exceptional” in matters of race denies the significance of “black analytics” for a full understanding of the context leading up to the Charlie Hebdo “event.” “White analytics” permits the universalization of racism and the suggestion that “reverse racism” or “Islamic leftism” are now dominant. In contrast, attention to the work of scholars and activists who shed light on race and ongoing coloniality in France is vital for the significant challenges of the present to be fully understood, paving the way for a renewal of a radical “political antiracism.”

Research paper thumbnail of Beyond denial: 'not racism' as racist violence

While the idea that racism is accompanied by its denial is well established, this paper examines ... more While the idea that racism is accompanied by its denial is well established, this paper examines the widespread explicit advocacy of a stance of ‘not racism’. The rejection of racism by proponents of positions that hinder the cause of racial justice is the discursive next step in ‘postracial’ racism. I examine the various ways in which racism has been proposed to be an ‘unhelpful’ framework. I make the case that the dominant position within philosophy of race that racism is, first and foremost, a moral failing has unwittingly contributed to the emergence of ‘not racism’ as a dominant expression in race thinking today. Following an examination of several key moral philosophical analyses of racism, I illustrate my argument that ‘not racism’ is a form of racist violence with reference to several recent and contemporary cases against the backdrop of the rise of ‘Global Trumpism’.

Research paper thumbnail of Not Doing Race in Australia

This paper examines the themes of 'casual racism', 'bystander antiracism' and 'ordinariness' in s... more This paper examines the themes of 'casual racism', 'bystander antiracism' and 'ordinariness' in some recent scholarship on racism in Australia. I argue that these approaches acknowledge, but fail to engage deeply, with the legacies of colonialism and black subjugation for understandings of racism today, and that they rely on a centering of 'white comfort' as a strategy of antiracism. In contrast, the paper reflects on elements of Black thought in order to decentre such 'white analytics', making the case that 'thinking blackly' about race and racism in Australia would bring about what Lewis Gordon calls more truthful, and hence more politically useful, accounts.

Research paper thumbnail of The 'Crisis of Multiculturalism' and the Global Politics of Trumpism

My contribution to the Sociological Review #Election2016 blog series.

Research paper thumbnail of Antiracism apps: framing understandings and approaches to antiracism education and intervention

Mobile apps for antiracism have become valuable pedagogical and activist tools for their real-tim... more Mobile apps for antiracism have become valuable pedagogical and activist tools for their real-time and mapping capabilities, their portability and intimate bodily presence, which enables a reaction exactly when an act of racism occurs. In this article, five mobile apps aimed at producing antiracism education or intervention outcomes from the United Kingdom, Australia and France are the focus of an interrogation of the ways in which racism and antiracism are framed and the strengths and weaknesses of these initiatives for countering dominant forms of everyday racism. We identify a number of different approaches to racism and antiracism in our inquiry, which lead to particular sets of aims, features and uses: the app as a tool for capturing, reporting and responding to racist acts; as a way of reinforcing a wider sense of community identity and solidarity; to demonstrate racism, especially Islamophobia, and make its forms visible, and as a means for challenging racism through raising awareness and encouraging bystanders to oppose it. We argue that while these apps are well disposed to exposing and manifesting isolated incidents of racism in everyday life, we question their potential for transformative societal outcomes beyond the level of unilateral action in the context of events experienced as unique incidents.

Research paper thumbnail of Racism and Sociology (ed. Wulf D. Hund, Alana Lentin)

CONTENTS | Wulf D. Hund: RACISM IN WHITE SOCIOLOGY. FROM ADAM SMITH TO MAX WEBER | Alana Lentin... more CONTENTS | Wulf D. Hund: RACISM IN WHITE SOCIOLOGY. FROM ADAM
SMITH TO MAX WEBER | Alana Lentin: POSTRACIAL SILENCES. THE OTH-
ERING OF RACE IN EUROPE | Felix Lösing: FROM THE CONGO TO CHICAGO.
ROBERT E. PARK’S ROMANCE WITH RACISM | Les Back, Maggie Tate:
TELLING ABOUT RACISM. W.E.B. DU BOIS, STUART HALL AND SOCIOLOGY’S
RECONSTRUCTION | Barnor Hesse: RACISM’S ALTERITY. THE AFTER-LIFE OF
BLACK SOCIOLOGY | Sirma Bilge: WHITENING INTERSECTIONALITY. EVANES-
CENCE OF RACE IN INTERSECTIONALITY SCHOLARSHIP | Silvia Rodríguez
Maeso, Marta Araújo: THE POLITICS OF (ANTI-)RACISM. ACADEMIC RE-
SEARCH AND POLICY DISCOURSE IN EUROPE

Research paper thumbnail of Racism and Sociology (Wulf D. Hund and Alana Lentin, eds.) Racism Analysis Series (yearbooks). Berlin: Lit. ( 2014).

Research paper thumbnail of Race and State

Research paper thumbnail of Racism and Anti-Racism In Europe

Research paper thumbnail of The Crises of Multiculturalism: Racism in a Neoliberal Age

Across the West, something called multiculturalism is in crisis. Regarded as the failed experimen... more Across the West, something called multiculturalism is in crisis. Regarded as the failed experiment of liberal elites, commentators and politicians compete to denounce its corrosive legacies; parallel communities threatening social cohesion, enemies within cultivated by irresponsible cultural relativism, mediaeval practices subverting national ‘ways of life’ and universal values. In beautifully belligerent writing, this unique and important new book forcefully challenges this familiar narrative of the rise and fall of multiculturalism by refuting the existence of a coherent era of ‘multiculturalism’ in the first place.

After an inspiring foreword by Guardian-journalist Gary Younge, the authors argue that what we are witnessing is not so much a rejection of multiculturalism as a rejection of lived multiculture. In documenting mainstream racism and the anxieties that inform it, Lentin and Titley show that the crisis is a projection of neoliberal societies’ disjunctures. This book combines theory with a reading of contemporary events and argues that challenging this notion provides activists with a chance to ultimately transcend resurgent racism.
Review

Alana Lentin and Gavan Titley offer a powerful and persuasive account of how multiculturalism has been sentenced to death. Drawing on a vast array of sources, voices and examples, they show how laments on the failure of multiculturalism create a political and affective landscape in which racism is simultaneously repudiated and reproduced. A necessary and important book.
- Sara Ahmed, Professor of Race and Cultural Studies, Goldsmiths College

This book provides a rich and scholarly analysis of the multiple forces at play in the construction of the ‘death of multiculturalism’ as a flexible and potent political discourse. Incisive and provocative in it’s analysis; it is uncomfortable reading for those on both the left and right in politics. This is necessary reading for anyone concerned with the complex masking of racism within the rhetorical dance of national identities and globalized neo-liberal ideologies.
- Professor Charles Husband, Centre for Applied Social Research, University of Bradford.

The Crises of Multiculturalism critically examines the entanglements inherent in the broad range of European multiculturalisms today, their “loud” rejection and yet a melancholic neediness expressed in their bemoaning. The analysis is especially incisive about the ways in which an “era of integration,” as multiculturalism’s contemporary expression, seeks insecurely to assert authoritative control and security in the face of threatening and fearful expressions of a burgeoning multiculture supposedly marking European nations. The authors reveal how the politics of multiculturalism continue to structure, reproduce, and render less visible contemporary racisms.Those concerned to understand the synchrony of multiculturalism, integration, and revitalized racisms across the European landscape would do well to consult this book.’

- Professor David Theo Goldberg, University of California

Lentin & Titley’s fierce critique provides a much-needed critical analysis of multiculturalism’s ineffectuality in opposing the racism rising in Europe today. The smiling rhetoric of tolerance, we learn here, is still produced by sharp white teeth. Highly recommended.

- Howard Winant, Center for New Racial Studies, University of California

Research paper thumbnail of Racism and Anti-Racism in Europe

‘Remarkable ... a major contribution to our understanding and handling of one of the crucial cont... more ‘Remarkable ... a major contribution to our understanding and handling of one of the crucial contemporary issues that acquires more gravity by the day.’ Zygmunt Bauman

This is an in-depth sociological study of the phenomenon of anti-racism, as both political discourse and social movement practice in western Europe.

Lentin develops a comparative study of anti-racism in Britain, France, Italy and Ireland. While ‘race’ and racism have been submitted to many profound analyses, anti-racism has often been dealt with as either the mere opposite of racism or as a theme for prescriptives or polemics by those concerned with the persistence of racist discrimination.

By contrast, this book views anti-racism as a variety of discourses that are central to the understanding of the politics of modern states. Examining anti-racism gives us insights not only into current debates on citizenship, immigration and Europeanisation, but it also crucially assists us in understanding the nature of race, racism and racialisation themselves.

At a time of mounting state racism against asylum seekers, migrants and refugees throughout Europe and beyond, this book provides a much-needed exploration of the discourse of anti-racism that shapes policy and public opinion today.

Research paper thumbnail of Racism

Despite the long struggle to eliminate racism, it is still very much with us. In fact, since ... more Despite the long struggle to eliminate racism, it is still very much with us. In fact, since 9/11, racism appears to be on the rise, making it more important than ever before to understand the meaning of race and the effect it has on society.

Alana Lentin maps the emergence and development of ideas about race through political history right up to modern debates about multiculturalism and Islamophobia, and considers the implications of a 'post-racial' society at a time when science has placed genetics over culture. Provocative and intelligent reading for the newcomer and expert alike, this invaluable resource exposes the roots of racial thought and demonstrates why it has remained crucial to our everyday lives.

"I've learned an enormous lot from Lentin's book. I only regret that a guide like this was not in existence when sixty years ago I started to study that phenomenon, one of the most insidious and complex of our times. My long struggle to comprehend its causes and poisonous logic would have been so much easier to wage – and win."
Zygmunt Bauman, Emeritus Professor of Sociology at the University of Leeds

"This book brings some valuable clarity into a theme that often generates a lot of confusion. Alana Lentin shows that there is nothing natural or inevitable about racism."
Stephen Castles, Director and Senior Researcher at IMI and Professor of Migration and Refugee Studies at the University of Oxford

"This is a lively, accessible and up to date introduction that should be read by anyone who wants to understand the impact of racism in the West today."
Alastair Bonnett, Professor of Social Geography at the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne

"Clearly and convincingly written, the book is especially effective in positioning the political stakes of contemporary racisms. Alana Lentin offers a very good springboard from which students can launch a critical examination of racisms."
David Theo Goldberg, Director of the University of California Humanities Research Institute

"An excellent and up to date introduction to one of the world's most enduring forms of injustice. Racism's shifting form and anatomy is dissected with precision offering a much needed political and sociological analysis."
Les Back, Professor and Deputy Head of the Department of Sociology, Goldsmiths College

"This is a provocative and stimulating book which deserves to be widely read. While at times the book makes for uncomfortable reading, Lentin’s sharp insights into the 'inherently political nature of racism' provides a major contribution to the study of racism in contemporary society."
Elaine Moriarty, lecturer in sociology at Trinity College, Dublin

"Provides a perceptive and accessible overview both of the history of racism and of its contemporary forms… An outstanding choice for course adoption across the social sciences and humanities."
Howard Winant, Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Santa Barbara

Research paper thumbnail of Racism and Ethnic Discrimination

Research paper thumbnail of The Politics of Diversity in Europe

'Diversity' has become a key term in contemporary social politics, and is often used as both a de... more 'Diversity' has become a key term in contemporary social politics, and is often used as both a description of complex social realities and a normative prescription for how those realities should be valued, influenced by the politics of multiculturalism and by social movements asserting "the right to be different" diversity has emerged as an open, fluid discourse that challenges reductive visions of legitimate identities and human possibilities. It is this apparent acceptance of diversity as a fact and value that this book sets out to examine, in a range of ways, it offers a countervailing assessment of 'diversity'; seeing it less as a unifying social imaginary and more as a cost-free form of politics attuned to the needs of late capitalist, consumer societies. The introduction distinguishes between 'diversity polities' - emerging from a range of critiques of social power - and the 'politics of diversity', a depoliticised celebration of difference that replicates the problems of multiculturalism without the benefits of the overt ideological engagement that multiculturalism has provoked.The essays collected here are developed from a research seminar entitled "Diversity, Human Rights and Participation" organised by the Partnership on Youth between the Council of Europe and the European Commission. The studies gathered here are embedded in 10 different national contexts. They track dimensions of 'diversity' in education, social services, jurisprudence, parliamentary proceedings and employment initiatives, and assess their significances for the social actors who must negotiate these frameworks in their daily experience.

Research paper thumbnail of Race and State

Speaking about racism in the western political climate of the first decade of the twenty-first ce... more Speaking about racism in the western political climate of the first decade of the twenty-first century is more difficult than ever before. There is a feeling in post-colonial and post-immigration societies that the blatant overt racism of the past is no longer as pressing. Admitting racism elicits discomfort because common wisdom tells us that racism opposes everything that we believe in as citizens of democratic, civilised modern states. Yet state racism appears to be here to stay and, in many ways, is more acceptable than ever before. Immigration detention centres, the deportation of failed asylum seekers and illegal immigrants, racial profiling and the rolling back of liberties won by the civil rights movement are all examples of how state racism impacts on our daily lives. Race and State contributes to breaking the taboo of discussing the links between race and state. The papers collected in this book highlight the interconnections between race and state, from historical, theoretical or contemporary sociological perspectives. Part I of the book looks at theoretical issues in conceptualising the race -state relationship. Part II examines racism in its most pernicious contemporary manifestation: the racialisation of terror . Part III, on the racial state(s) of Ireland, is an important addition to the debate, examining Ireland as a test case for demonstrating and interpreting the relationship between race and state.

Research paper thumbnail of Review of The Scholar Denied by Aldon Morris

Research paper thumbnail of The Spectre of “Multiculturalism” by Molly Klein

'Two Irish social scientists Alana Lentin and Gavan Titley undertake to do precisely this in thei... more 'Two Irish social scientists Alana Lentin and Gavan Titley undertake to do precisely this in their truly useful new book The Crisis of Multiculturalism: Racism in a Neoliberal Age (Zed Books, 2011). And when I term the book as “useful”, I mean to say it is one of those rare books that are a weapon for struggle.'

Research paper thumbnail of Review of Paul Gilroy Postcolonial Melancholia and Between Camps

Routledge have republished Paul Gilroy’s 2000 Between Camps in accompaniment to his 2004 offering... more Routledge have republished Paul Gilroy’s 2000 Between Camps in accompaniment to his 2004 offering, After Empire, a book-length essay that, in part, attempts to apply the theorization made in Between Camps to the contemporary British context. It is of interest to note that the US edition of the earlier book was entitled The End of Race, a title that attempted to simplify the kernel of Gilroy’s argument. Both of the books reviewed here may
indeed be said to be centred around what for Gilroy has become a central question: whether ‘race’ has expended its political utility for the anti-racist project and asking instead, in what other terms this struggle may be couched. However, Gilroy displays an ambivalent stance on the issue, arguing for an end to ‘race’ but never really providing sufficiently convincing arguments in support of his case.

Research paper thumbnail of Racism and Sociology Reviewed by Nisha Kapoor, Ethnic and Racial Studies

In the midst of student disquiet vocalised through campaigns running across the UK that ask ‘why ... more In the midst of student disquiet vocalised through campaigns running across the UK that ask ‘why is my curriculum white?’, this book which poses to interrogate the relationship between Racism and Sociology offers a timely intervention. Taking its cue from the well-noted point long made amongst race scholars concerning the marginalisation of W.E.B. DuBois within the discipline when compared with the more established ‘founding fathers’ of Weber and Durkheim, this collection sets out to demonstrate how the development of Sociology has been culpable in institutionalising the racial project. The book's important contribution to the field lies in its interrogation, not simply of the failure of mainstream sociological analyses to recognise how racial structures order social relations, but in its grappling with the ways in which racism has underpinned theoretical developments of the social question.

Research paper thumbnail of Book Review: Mike Marqusee, Redemption Song: Muhammed Ali and the Spirit of the Sixties (from pp. 32).

Research paper thumbnail of The Crises of Multiculturalism: Racism in a neoliberal age reviewed by Arun Kundnani

Race and Class, 2012

Read the review here: http://www.scribd.com/doc/101711566/Kundnani-Review

Research paper thumbnail of The Crises of Multiculturalism reviewed by Scott Poynting

Research paper thumbnail of The Crises of Multiculturalism: Racism in a neoliberal age reviewed by Valluvan

Research paper thumbnail of The Crises of Multiculturalism: Racism in a neoliberal age reviewed by Eugenia Siapera

Global Media and Communication

Research paper thumbnail of The Crises of Multiculturalism: Racism in a neoliberal age reviewed by Jan Dobbernack

Ethnic and Racial Studies, Mar 23, 2012

Research paper thumbnail of Thinking blackly beyond bio politics and bare life

Alexander Weheliye’s 2014 book, Habeas Viscus is a vital critique of two dominant accounts of the... more Alexander Weheliye’s 2014 book, Habeas Viscus is a vital critique of two dominant accounts of the limits and contours of humanity: Michel Foucault’s biopolitics and Giorgio Agamben’s bare life. But beyond providing us with a much needed problematisation of these two theories, what they omit, and the Eurocentrisms they reproduce, this book offers much more. In fact, despite the book’s framing around the critique of bare life and biopolitics, Habeas Viscus in my reading is really a call to see race – and thus the concept of the human – otherwise and a rallying call for Black thought and its centrality for making sense of modernity. Alexander Weheliye, a professor of African-American studies, is primarily a cultural-literary theorist/philosopher. His points of reference and his lyrical, evocative but dense writing style are harder for sociologists to access. Nevertheless, his insistence on placing Black feminist thought at the heart of this theorization of race, the human and the ‘possibilities of other worlds’ (Weheliye 2014: 2) means that there is a lot that race critical students interested in the function of race but also the constant possibility of self-emancipation in the face of its structuring constraints can learn from his groundbreaking book.

Research paper thumbnail of Learning from Lisa Lowe

Lisa Lowe‘s 2015 book, The Intimacies of Four Continents, is the impetus for this week’s blog, th... more Lisa Lowe‘s 2015 book, The Intimacies of Four Continents, is the impetus for this week’s blog, the fifth in my Race Critical and Decolonial Sociology series. This groundbreaking work challenges us to unread standard accounts of the development of capitalist modernity and political liberalism. It does not do this only by inserting race, gender and the colonial in order to disrupt these standard accounts. While this work is vital, Lisa Lowe goes several steps further. She reorients official histories by reading the archives against each other and juxtaposes this archaeological work with an unreading of standard texts from literature, autobiography and political philosophy. The Intimacies of Four Continents is not the kind of book that sociologists are used to reading, but neither is it a standard work of history, literature or philosophy as it is profoundly interdisciplinary. The book is an example par excellence of what a relational, interactive or connected account looks like, taking us several steps deeper into the discussion, begun in blogs 3 and 4, about the methodological and epistemological challenges of doing sociology with a truly global orientation.

Research paper thumbnail of On Relationality in Race Research

This is the third contribution to the Race Critical and Decolonial Sociology blog series. In it I... more This is the third contribution to the Race Critical and Decolonial Sociology blog series. In it I look at the argument advanced by David Theo Goldberg (2009) that a relational approach to the study of race and racism reveals more than a comparativist approach does. I propose, however, that before being able to discuss the relative adequacy of either approach, we must have a good understanding of what is being researched when we centre race in accounts of historical or contemporary social, political and economic processes.

Research paper thumbnail of Reflection on Robin Kelley.docx

A reflection on Black Study, Black Struggle by Robin D.G. Kelley

Research paper thumbnail of Racism and War on Multiculturalism

It has become a problem to identify that racism has been made to play a role in how austerity is ... more It has become a problem to identify that racism has been made to play a role in how austerity is framed – as a struggle between the deserving native and the undeserving, undesirable yet desiring migrant. This conveniently ignores the detrimental effects that the mobilisation of race, and sexualised race in particular, has on achieving the societies we need, in which there is enough for all.

Research paper thumbnail of Racism in a post-racial Europe

Research paper thumbnail of The Intifada of the Banlieues

Research paper thumbnail of The Crises of Multiculturalism

Research paper thumbnail of Shilpa Shetty and Celebrity Big Brother

Research paper thumbnail of Multiculturalism or Anti-Racism

Research paper thumbnail of How apps and other online tools are challenging racist attacks

Research paper thumbnail of The case for Open Borders

Underlying Bernard Keane’s article – ‘“Let them all come” is “stop the boats” for progressives’ –... more Underlying Bernard Keane’s article – ‘“Let them all come” is “stop the boats” for progressives’ – is a deep sense of indignation about the idea that Australians are racist. The oft-repeated argument is that elitist, disconnected, latte-sippers tut-tut over ‘Bogan’ racism, serving to displace the problem. So far so uninteresting. What this leads to is largely meaningless tit for tats between white people, stultifying crucial debates to be had about refugee policy. The focus is narrowed to disagreements over the purpose of the Left that fail to focus on the issue at hand. Paradoxically, the key thing that Keane admonishes left-liberal handwringers for is deflecting a focus on policy by prioritising unworkable ideals, such as ‘let them all come’. However, articles that themselves do not suggest concrete responses to the (manufactured) ‘refugee crisis’ and merely tell others off for failing to do the same are part of the problem, not part of the solution.

Research paper thumbnail of Should Pussy Riot boycott the Festival of Dangerous Ideas?

Research paper thumbnail of Sydney Biennale boycott victory shows that divestment works

Research paper thumbnail of 'Bolt laws': should it be unlawful to insult people because of their race?

Research paper thumbnail of  Refugees: a call for open borders and free movement for all

Research paper thumbnail of Why Scott Morrison is wrong on immigration

Research paper thumbnail of  Bus attacks: what lies behind those racist rants?

Research paper thumbnail of Cameron's immigration hierarchy: Indians good, eastern Europeans bad

Research paper thumbnail of  François Hollande's misguided move: taking 'race' out of the constitution

Research paper thumbnail of  Why is Britain sending Luqman Onikosi back to die in Nigeria?

Research paper thumbnail of Racism is still very much with us. So why don't we recognise it?

Research paper thumbnail of  Diane Abbott's tweet and the red herring of anti-white racism

Research paper thumbnail of The Florence killings are a symptom of a wider racism

Research paper thumbnail of Anders Behring Breivik had no legitimate grievance

Research paper thumbnail of Racism in a neoliberal age: an interview with Alana Lentin

The Multicultural Politic

Research paper thumbnail of Q&A in The Big Issue

Research paper thumbnail of The Disruption of Postracial Certainty as an Antiracist Urgency

The video of a keynote address I gave on the status of race, racism and antiracism at the confere... more The video of a keynote address I gave on the status of race, racism and antiracism at the conference, 'Post-Migrant Society?!' at the Jewish Museum Berlin in November 2015. My talk begins at 34 minutes in.

Research paper thumbnail of Blood by Gil Anidjar: A comment

This short talk discusses what implications thinking with blood has for race critical and decolon... more This short talk discusses what implications thinking with blood has for race critical and decolonial scholarship or, in other words, what does 'Blood' add to our understanding of race?

Research paper thumbnail of Race, Post-race

A keynote lecture at the Institute for Cultural Inquiry Berlin, June 2014

Research paper thumbnail of Post-race and Islamophobia

A talk at Politics in the Pub, Sydney February 19 2015

Research paper thumbnail of Race as Relational and Relatable

Talk given at the Mellon Foundation Colloquium on 'Difference Diversity and Inclusion', June 2017.

Research paper thumbnail of The impact of antiracism apps on race and embodiment

A talk given at the Somatechnics Conference, Byron Bay, December 2016. As Jessie Daniels (2013) ... more A talk given at the Somatechnics Conference, Byron Bay, December 2016.

As Jessie Daniels (2013) shows, just as race is both embedded in and afforded by technology in general, it is encoded in the infrastructure, design and interface of the Internet. The burgeoning study of the relationship between race and digital technology (cf. Nakamura 2008, Nakamura and Chow White 2012, Noble 2014, Sharma 2013, etc.) has not as yet focused greatly on the role of mobile app technology. While this gap can be explained by the relative nascence of the everyday use of smart phones, this is a field in need of urgent research given the significance of embodiment to racialization.

As Farman notes, physical space is being altered as we continuously locate ourselves ‘simultaneously in digital space and in material space’ as a result of ubiquitous mobile phone use (Farman (2012: 17). How then is racial embodiment enhanced, affected or disturbed by the phone in our pockets?

Based on a long-term commitment to researching race from the perspective of antiracism (Lentin 2004), this paper examines the role played by the growing number of antiracism mobile apps on the relationship between race, embodiment and digital technology. Based on empirical research with the developers of a number of different apps for antiracism intervention or education in three countries, I argue that these mobile apps potentially make it possible to place digitally constituted ideas of race in confrontation with their materially located effects. How one responds to a racist incident might increasingly be a function of how race is interpreted in the design of antiracism apps. This raises important questions for the designers of the increasing number of antiracism apps being developed in light of the rise in race hate crime and the awareness of racist policing. It also invites us to consider the effects of the imbrication of race in digital technology in embodied space, and the impact of how race is variably represented digitally upon antiracism action beyond the screen.

Research paper thumbnail of Free Speech and Religious Freedom after Charlie Hebdo and Section 18C

On April 7, I was invited to participate in a round table on ‘Free Speech and Religious Freedom a... more On April 7, I was invited to participate in a round table on ‘Free Speech and Religious Freedom after Charlie Hebdo and Section 18C’ at the University of Wollongong by Tanja Dreher and Michael Griffiths on the occasion of Anshuman Mondal‘s visit to the University. Here are the slides from my brief presentation which touched on recent events in France and made an attempt to connect them to issues arising from the theorisation of the postracial. also gave a response to Mondal’s lecture, ‘Freedom of Expression and Religious Freedom in Contemporary Multiculture’, the text of which I reproduce here.

Research paper thumbnail of Race (Handbook of Political Sociology).pdf

A discussion of debates in the study of race and racism for the Sage Handbook of Political Sociol... more A discussion of debates in the study of race and racism for the Sage Handbook of Political Sociology, edited by William Outhwaite and Stephen Turner (forthcoming 2017).

Research paper thumbnail of Not Your Holocaust

This short post adds to the reflection began in 'Seizing refugees’ valuables and the lure of ‘fro... more This short post adds to the reflection began in 'Seizing refugees’ valuables and the lure of ‘frozen’ racism'