Description

Book Synopsis
De-Whitening Intersectionality: Race, Intercultural Communication, and Politics re-evaluates how the logic of color-blindness as whiteness is at play in the current scope of intersectional research on race, intercultural communication, and politics. Calling for a re-centering of difference by exploring the emergence and inception of intersectionality concepts, the coeditors and contributors distinguish between the uses of intersectionality that seem inclusive versus those that actually enact inclusion by demonstrating how to re-conceptualize intersectionality in ways that explicate, elucidate, and elaborate culture-specific and text-specific nuances of knowledge for women of color, queer/trans-people of color, and non-western people of color who have been marked as the Others. As a feminist of color tradition, intersectionality has been appropriated through increasing popularity in the discipline of communication, undermining efforts to critique power when researchers reduce the concep

Table of Contents
Foreword

Ashley Mack, Louisiana State University



Introduction: De-Whitening Intersectionality in Intercultural Communication

Bernadette Marie Calafell, Gonzaga University

Shinsuke Eguchi, University of New Mexico

Shadee Abdi, San Francisco State University



Section I: The Politics of Theorizing



Chapter 1: Intersectionalities in the Fields of Chicana Feminism: Pursuing Decolonization through Xicanisma’s “Resurrection of the Dreamers”

Michelle A. Holling, California State University, San Marcos

Chapter 2: Lethal Intersections and “Chicana Badgirls”

Jaelyn deMaría, University of New Mexico

Chapter 3: Black Feminist Thought, Intersectionality, and Intercultural Communication

Aisha Durham, University of South Florida

Chapter 4: Intersectional Assemblages of Whiteness: The Case of Rachel Dolezal’s Whiteness

Dawn Marie McIntosh, Independent Scholar

Chapter 5: Doing intersectionality under a different name: The (un)intentional politics of refusal

Santhosh Chandrashekar, University of Denver



Section II: Personal Narratives



Chapter 6: Fighting Against Erasure: Making Space for Queer Chicanas

Bernadette Marie Calafell, Gonzaga University

Chapter 7: A Local Gay Man/Tongzhi or A Transnational Queer/Qu-er/Kuer: (Re)organizing My

Queerness and Asianess through Personal Reflection

Andy Kai-chun Chuang, LaGuardia Community College

Chapter 8: What are you?: Embodying and Storying Categorical Uncertainty

Benny LeMaster, Arizona State University

Amber Johnson, St. Louis University.

Miranda Olzman, University of Denver

Chapter 9: Bodies that Collide: Feeling Intersectionality

Sachi Sekimoto, Minnesota State University, Mankato

Chris Brown, Minnesota State University, Mankato

Justin Rudnick, Minnesota State University, Mankato

Chapter 10: Microaggressions in Flux: Whiteness, Disability and Masculinity in Academia

Hannen Ghabra, Kuwait University

Shahd Al Shammari, Kuwait University



Section III: Transnational Circumferences



Chapter 11: Remembering Julia de Burgos: Faithful Witnessing through a Decolonial Feminist Performance

Sara Baugh, Agnes Scott College

Chapter 12: De-Whitening Intersectionality through Transfeminismo

Raquel Moreira, Graceland University

Chapter 13: Dark Looks: Sensory Contours of Racism in India

Pavi Prasad, California State University, Northridge

Anjana Raghavan, Sheffield Hallam University

Chapter 14: “We had to sink or swim”: Privileging racialized ethnic identifications among Asians and Asian Americans

Yea-Wen Chen, San Diego State University

Chapter 15: Crazy Sexy Asian Men!: Masculinities in Crazy Rich Asians

Zhao Ding, Gustavus Adolphus College

Kamela Rasmussen, University of New Mexico

Foreword

Ashley Mack, Louisiana State University



Introduction: De-Whitening Intersectionality in Intercultural Communication

Bernadette Marie Calafell, Gonzaga University

Shinsuke Eguchi, University of New Mexico

Shadee Abdi, San Francisco State University



Section I: The Politics of Theorizing



Chapter 1: Intersectionalities in the Fields of Chicana Feminism: Pursuing Decolonization through Xicanisma’s “Resurrection of the Dreamers”

Michelle A. Holling, California State University, San Marcos

Chapter 2: Lethal Intersections and “Chicana Badgirls”

Jaelyn deMaría, University of New Mexico

Chapter 3: Black Feminist Thought, Intersectionality, and Intercultural Communication

Aisha Durham, University of South Florida

Chapter 4: Intersectional Assemblages of Whiteness: The Case of Rachel Dolezal’s Whiteness

Dawn Marie McIntosh, Independent Scholar

Chapter 5: Doing intersectionality under a different name: The (un)intentional politics of refusal

Santhosh Chandrashekar, University of Denver



Section II: Personal Narratives



Chapter 6: Fighting Against Erasure: Making Space for Queer Chicanas

Bernadette Marie Calafell, Gonzaga University

Chapter 7: A Local Gay Man/Tongzhi or A Transnational Queer/Qu-er/Kuer: (Re)organizing My

Queerness and Asianess through Personal Reflection

Andy Kai-chun Chuang, LaGuardia Community College

Chapter 8: What are you?: Embodying and Storying Categorical Uncertainty

Benny LeMaster, Arizona State University

Amber Johnson, St. Louis University.

Miranda Olzman, University of Denver

Chapter 9: Bodies that Collide: Feeling Intersectionality

Sachi Sekimoto, Minnesota State University, Mankato

Chris Brown, Minnesota State University, Mankato

Justin Rudnick, Minnesota State University, Mankato

Chapter 10: Microaggressions in Flux: Whiteness, Disability and Masculinity in Academia

Hannen Ghabra, Kuwait University

Shahd Al Shammari, Kuwait University



Section III: Transnational Circumferences



Chapter 11: Remembering Julia de Burgos: Faithful Witnessing through a Decolonial Feminist Performance

Sara Baugh, Agnes Scott College

Chapter 12: De-Whitening Intersectionality through Transfeminismo

Raquel Moreira, Graceland University

Chapter 13: Dark Looks: Sensory Contours of Racism in India

Pavi Prasad, California State University, Northridge

Anjana Raghavan, Sheffield Hallam University

Chapter 14: “We had to sink or swim”: Privileging racialized ethnic identifications among Asians and Asian Americans

Yea-Wen Chen, San Diego State University

Chapter 15: Crazy Sexy Asian Men!: Masculinities in Crazy Rich Asians

Zhao Ding, Gustavus Adolphus College

Kamela Rasmussen, University of New Mexico

DeWhitening Intersectionality

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    A Hardback by Bernadette Marie Calafell, Shadee Abdi

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      View other formats and editions of DeWhitening Intersectionality by

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 1/24/2020 12:07:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498588225, 978-1498588225
      ISBN10: 1498588220

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      De-Whitening Intersectionality: Race, Intercultural Communication, and Politics re-evaluates how the logic of color-blindness as whiteness is at play in the current scope of intersectional research on race, intercultural communication, and politics. Calling for a re-centering of difference by exploring the emergence and inception of intersectionality concepts, the coeditors and contributors distinguish between the uses of intersectionality that seem inclusive versus those that actually enact inclusion by demonstrating how to re-conceptualize intersectionality in ways that explicate, elucidate, and elaborate culture-specific and text-specific nuances of knowledge for women of color, queer/trans-people of color, and non-western people of color who have been marked as the Others. As a feminist of color tradition, intersectionality has been appropriated through increasing popularity in the discipline of communication, undermining efforts to critique power when researchers reduce the concep

      Table of Contents
      Foreword

      Ashley Mack, Louisiana State University



      Introduction: De-Whitening Intersectionality in Intercultural Communication

      Bernadette Marie Calafell, Gonzaga University

      Shinsuke Eguchi, University of New Mexico

      Shadee Abdi, San Francisco State University



      Section I: The Politics of Theorizing



      Chapter 1: Intersectionalities in the Fields of Chicana Feminism: Pursuing Decolonization through Xicanisma’s “Resurrection of the Dreamers”

      Michelle A. Holling, California State University, San Marcos

      Chapter 2: Lethal Intersections and “Chicana Badgirls”

      Jaelyn deMaría, University of New Mexico

      Chapter 3: Black Feminist Thought, Intersectionality, and Intercultural Communication

      Aisha Durham, University of South Florida

      Chapter 4: Intersectional Assemblages of Whiteness: The Case of Rachel Dolezal’s Whiteness

      Dawn Marie McIntosh, Independent Scholar

      Chapter 5: Doing intersectionality under a different name: The (un)intentional politics of refusal

      Santhosh Chandrashekar, University of Denver



      Section II: Personal Narratives



      Chapter 6: Fighting Against Erasure: Making Space for Queer Chicanas

      Bernadette Marie Calafell, Gonzaga University

      Chapter 7: A Local Gay Man/Tongzhi or A Transnational Queer/Qu-er/Kuer: (Re)organizing My

      Queerness and Asianess through Personal Reflection

      Andy Kai-chun Chuang, LaGuardia Community College

      Chapter 8: What are you?: Embodying and Storying Categorical Uncertainty

      Benny LeMaster, Arizona State University

      Amber Johnson, St. Louis University.

      Miranda Olzman, University of Denver

      Chapter 9: Bodies that Collide: Feeling Intersectionality

      Sachi Sekimoto, Minnesota State University, Mankato

      Chris Brown, Minnesota State University, Mankato

      Justin Rudnick, Minnesota State University, Mankato

      Chapter 10: Microaggressions in Flux: Whiteness, Disability and Masculinity in Academia

      Hannen Ghabra, Kuwait University

      Shahd Al Shammari, Kuwait University



      Section III: Transnational Circumferences



      Chapter 11: Remembering Julia de Burgos: Faithful Witnessing through a Decolonial Feminist Performance

      Sara Baugh, Agnes Scott College

      Chapter 12: De-Whitening Intersectionality through Transfeminismo

      Raquel Moreira, Graceland University

      Chapter 13: Dark Looks: Sensory Contours of Racism in India

      Pavi Prasad, California State University, Northridge

      Anjana Raghavan, Sheffield Hallam University

      Chapter 14: “We had to sink or swim”: Privileging racialized ethnic identifications among Asians and Asian Americans

      Yea-Wen Chen, San Diego State University

      Chapter 15: Crazy Sexy Asian Men!: Masculinities in Crazy Rich Asians

      Zhao Ding, Gustavus Adolphus College

      Kamela Rasmussen, University of New Mexico

      Foreword

      Ashley Mack, Louisiana State University



      Introduction: De-Whitening Intersectionality in Intercultural Communication

      Bernadette Marie Calafell, Gonzaga University

      Shinsuke Eguchi, University of New Mexico

      Shadee Abdi, San Francisco State University



      Section I: The Politics of Theorizing



      Chapter 1: Intersectionalities in the Fields of Chicana Feminism: Pursuing Decolonization through Xicanisma’s “Resurrection of the Dreamers”

      Michelle A. Holling, California State University, San Marcos

      Chapter 2: Lethal Intersections and “Chicana Badgirls”

      Jaelyn deMaría, University of New Mexico

      Chapter 3: Black Feminist Thought, Intersectionality, and Intercultural Communication

      Aisha Durham, University of South Florida

      Chapter 4: Intersectional Assemblages of Whiteness: The Case of Rachel Dolezal’s Whiteness

      Dawn Marie McIntosh, Independent Scholar

      Chapter 5: Doing intersectionality under a different name: The (un)intentional politics of refusal

      Santhosh Chandrashekar, University of Denver



      Section II: Personal Narratives



      Chapter 6: Fighting Against Erasure: Making Space for Queer Chicanas

      Bernadette Marie Calafell, Gonzaga University

      Chapter 7: A Local Gay Man/Tongzhi or A Transnational Queer/Qu-er/Kuer: (Re)organizing My

      Queerness and Asianess through Personal Reflection

      Andy Kai-chun Chuang, LaGuardia Community College

      Chapter 8: What are you?: Embodying and Storying Categorical Uncertainty

      Benny LeMaster, Arizona State University

      Amber Johnson, St. Louis University.

      Miranda Olzman, University of Denver

      Chapter 9: Bodies that Collide: Feeling Intersectionality

      Sachi Sekimoto, Minnesota State University, Mankato

      Chris Brown, Minnesota State University, Mankato

      Justin Rudnick, Minnesota State University, Mankato

      Chapter 10: Microaggressions in Flux: Whiteness, Disability and Masculinity in Academia

      Hannen Ghabra, Kuwait University

      Shahd Al Shammari, Kuwait University



      Section III: Transnational Circumferences



      Chapter 11: Remembering Julia de Burgos: Faithful Witnessing through a Decolonial Feminist Performance

      Sara Baugh, Agnes Scott College

      Chapter 12: De-Whitening Intersectionality through Transfeminismo

      Raquel Moreira, Graceland University

      Chapter 13: Dark Looks: Sensory Contours of Racism in India

      Pavi Prasad, California State University, Northridge

      Anjana Raghavan, Sheffield Hallam University

      Chapter 14: “We had to sink or swim”: Privileging racialized ethnic identifications among Asians and Asian Americans

      Yea-Wen Chen, San Diego State University

      Chapter 15: Crazy Sexy Asian Men!: Masculinities in Crazy Rich Asians

      Zhao Ding, Gustavus Adolphus College

      Kamela Rasmussen, University of New Mexico

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