Cartography of Afro-Asian relations in America: co-racialization and nanohealing

IF 1.5 3区 文学 Q2 COMMUNICATION Communication Culture & Critique Pub Date : 2023-11-03 DOI:10.1093/ccc/tcad035
Hsin-I Cheng
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Abstract

Abstract In public discourse, there has been hostile communication between Asian and Black communities in the US. This article proposes co-racialization as a lens in examining Asian and Black Americans’ relationality. Co-racialization occurs in and across space and time, in that individuals and groups with various and uneven resources shape their views of themselves and their counterparts. Seventy-two Asian Americans and Black Americans were interviewed. Through the concepts of “racial project” and “hydraulic and nanoracism,” I trace the ways in which these co-racializations are mediated. Themes of their “home and neighborhood as space of mediation;” “segregated learning institutions with hydraulic racism mediated by pop culture;” and “perpetual tensions and nanoracism in the ‘fuzzy zones’” emerged. This article calls for nanohealing—an intentionally sustained relationality-building rooted in on-the-ground spaces of interactions and mediation—as an imperative part of co-racialization to resist the thin relationality between racial minorities.
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美国亚非关系的制图:共种族化和纳米愈合
在公共话语中,美国亚裔和黑人社区之间一直存在着敌对的交流。这篇文章提出共同种族化作为一个镜头来审视亚裔和黑人美国人的关系。共同种族化发生在空间和时间中,因为拥有各种不同和不均匀资源的个人和群体形成了他们对自己和对手的看法。72名亚裔美国人和黑人接受了采访。通过“种族计划”和“液压和纳米种族主义”的概念,我追溯了这些共种族化被调解的方式。他们的主题是“作为调解空间的家和社区”;“流行文化介导的液压种族主义的隔离学习机构”;以及“‘模糊区域’中永恒的紧张和纳米种族主义”。这篇文章呼吁纳米愈合——一种根植于互动和调解的实地空间的有意识的持续关系的建立——作为共同种族化的必要部分,以抵制种族少数之间的稀薄关系。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
5.90%
发文量
41
期刊介绍: CCC provides an international forum for critical research in communication, media, and cultural studies. We welcome high-quality research and analyses that place questions of power, inequality, and justice at the center of empirical and theoretical inquiry. CCC seeks to bring a diversity of critical approaches (political economy, feminist analysis, critical race theory, postcolonial critique, cultural studies, queer theory) to bear on the role of communication, media, and culture in power dynamics on a global scale. CCC is especially interested in critical scholarship that engages with emerging lines of inquiry across the humanities and social sciences. We seek to explore the place of mediated communication in current topics of theorization and cross-disciplinary research (including affect, branding, posthumanism, labor, temporality, ordinariness, and networked everyday life, to name just a few examples). In the coming years, we anticipate publishing special issues on these themes.
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