Race and sameness On the limits of beyond race and the art of staying with the trouble
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| Publication date | 2022 |
| Journal | Comparative Migration Studies |
| Article number | 13 |
| Volume | Issue number | 10 |
| Number of pages | 16 |
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| Abstract |
In this commentary I argue that rather than going beyond race, we need to ‘stay with the trouble’ of race (Haraway 2016). Race, I want to suggest, is precisely ‘trouble’ because it is produced and sustained in everyday practices. To make this more tangible, I will zoom in on one specific case, a homicide case, that was eventually solved through forensic technologies and attend to the impact of the case on society. Analyzing responses in the media to the identification of suspect, I focus on the sense of community that emerged, and unravel how race came to play a role. To push the point that we need to attend to the intricacies of race, I will switch focus from an analysis of race in relation to difference, to race in relation to sameness. As I argue, while difference tends to be politicized, sameness has been viewed as curiously apolitical and thus functions as the baseline. Here I suggest to differentiate between sameness as otherness and sameness as us-ness. My analyses is aimed at inviting us to stay curious about what race is made to be in practice, how it manifests and what politics it does.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1186/s40878-022-00287-z |
| Downloads |
s40878-022-00287-z
(Final published version)
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