“…It is understandable because doing something is a defence against the shock (including the shock of the complicity that is revealed); it is complicated because of the impulse to make amends, to somehow reconcile or ‘re‐cover’ the past. The desire to act is as complex, Swan argues, because of the assumption of various subject positions on the part of those who feel a need to ‘do’ something: to make public a sense of moral outrage; to express solidarity or to demonstrate optimism in the restorative capacity of the future, rephrased, Swan argues, as a rhetorical call to activism: ‘what can be done?’ Swan's critique of this impetus rests on the idea that the desire to act, albeit with the best of intentions, can work to ‘block’ hearing, a process that can ‘stop the message getting through’ (Ahmed, , cited in Swan, , p. 547). Putting it starkly, Swan argues that ‘white researchers need to listen and learn’, and stop trying to ‘make a difference’.…”