2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1548-1433.2011.01368.x
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Anthropology as White Public Space?

Abstract: How far has anthropology come in becoming racially inclusive? In this article, we analyze an online survey of anthropology graduate students and faculty of color undertaken by the AAA Commission on Race and Racism in Anthropology. Despite some progress, institutional and attitudinal barriers remain. We use the concept of "white public space" to analyze these barriers: departmental labor is divided in ways that assign to faculty and graduate students of color responsibilities that have lower status and rewards … Show more

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Cited by 90 publications
(67 citation statements)
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“…These lines of investigation also highlight the lack of awareness among those with privilege that their tolerance of structural impediments imposes silence on those with less power [49]. In all these studies of discrimination and harassment, respondents felt that speaking out would jeopardize their careers in ways white men rarely experience [5,6,49,50]. …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These lines of investigation also highlight the lack of awareness among those with privilege that their tolerance of structural impediments imposes silence on those with less power [49]. In all these studies of discrimination and harassment, respondents felt that speaking out would jeopardize their careers in ways white men rarely experience [5,6,49,50]. …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Scholars decry the lack of minorities and women in their fields and in positions of power, and these are issues addressed in particular in the social sciences; however, discussion is not action, and discussion is not enough to counter the effects of a broader racist and sexist system. Diversity is seen as a social good, but not necessarily a disciplinary good, and that less-valued work is typically left to minorities and women (Brodkin et al 2011;Rockquemore and Laszloffy 2008). As long as this is the case, the academy will remain a de facto White masculine space with ghettoes of women's and ethnic studies.…”
Section: Black Feminist Theory In Prehistorymentioning
confidence: 98%
“…In this introduction and special section, we specifically want to stress how the history of anthropology depends on racialist imperial logics based on the privileging of whiteness. We assert that the social conditions of whiteness (and Otherness) continue to be embedded in the notions of “evidence” and “discovery,” in whom—and how—we study anthropologically and in the perpetuation of anthropology as “white public space” (Brodkin, Morgen, and Hutchinson ). Indeed, as Brodkin, Morgen, and Hutchinson () have shown, anthropology is a white intellectual and social space that perpetuates unequal hiring practices and labor divisions through discourses of being “not about race.”…”
Section: Anthropology As White Supremacymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, most anthropologists of color are not hired in anthropology departments, and “racialized minority faculty are more likely to be in ethnic or gender studies departments, and in departments without anthropology in their title.” When they are found in anthropology departments, they are cross‐ or joint‐appointed in other departments and programs . Coming into anthropology through “the back door,” scholars of color are split between multiple departments (usually ethnic or cultural studies) to satisfy “diversity” hires, are often excluded from true decision making within the discipline, and are heaped with extra, invisible labor (Brodkin, Morgen, and Hutchinson , 545; Dávila , 39; Harrison , 53) . Last, topics and areas of focus have also been laden with colonialist dynamics that are tied to white supremacist classificatory structures.…”
Section: Anthropology As White Supremacymentioning
confidence: 99%