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From West Street to Pixley Kaseme Street: How Contemporary Racialised Subjectivities Are (Re)produced in Cities
Lyndsay Brown
From West Street to Pixley Kaseme Street: How Contemporary Racialised Subjectivities Are (Re)produced in Cities
Lyndsay Brown
Is race perpetuated through the continuing construction of our racialised subjectivities in/through place? This question places this book squarely within the fields of the social psychology of race, place and identity. To collect data that could facilitate access to racialised place-identity constructions, the author used a mobile methodology in which black and white city government officials (who had grown up in Durban, South Africa) took her on walking and/or driving tours of the city of Durban talking about the racial transformation of this city from apartheid times to the present post- apartheid city. Through paying close analytic attention to the interaction on the tours it became evident that key practices which produced race on the tours ? the spatial, discursive and embodied practices ? were inextricably connected to each other in a ?trialectical? (tri-constitutional) relationship. It is argued that this trialectical relationship needs further analysis because of the ways in which it facilitates the creation of racial sticking points which obfuscate racial transformation.
Media | Books Paperback Book (Book with soft cover and glued back) |
Released | June 10, 2010 |
ISBN13 | 9783838371061 |
Publishers | LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing |
Pages | 220 |
Dimensions | 225 × 12 × 150 mm · 326 g |
Language | English |