Sticky Raciolinguistics

IF 1 4区 社会学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY Signs and Society Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1086/722622
V. Pak, M. Hiramoto
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Singapore’s postcolonial multiracialism is held together by state policies that categorize its citizens into four major race groups ordered according to their size: Chinese, Malay, Indian, and Others. This postcolonial framework—with its colonial logics of statal race management and categorization—governs social life in Singapore. Recent race talk has birthed a contentious term—Chinese privilege—that has found its way into common parlance and is now deployed as an explanation for overt and covert racism. “Chinese privilege,” continuous from White privilege, may be understood as the belief that sociopolitical advantages are accorded to those racialized as Chinese. We take cues from Ahmed’s (2004b) notion of “stickiness” to consider how (1) Western ideas of racialized power rooted in Whiteness are reconfigured in postcolonial Singapore and (2) the processes of racialization and racial categorization are uncritically reproduced in invocations of Chinese privilege as censure and confessional. We interpret the notion of sticky raciolinguistics as the inextricability of race-language conaturalization from antecedent centers of White-settler colonial thought.
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这是那里Raciolinguistics
新加坡的后殖民多种族主义是由国家政策维系起来的,国家政策将其公民按人口大小分为四个主要种族:华人、马来人、印度人和其他民族。这种后殖民框架——连同其国家种族管理和分类的殖民逻辑——支配着新加坡的社会生活。最近关于种族的讨论产生了一个有争议的术语——华人特权——它已经进入了日常用语,现在被用来解释公开和隐蔽的种族主义。“华人特权”延续自白人特权,可以理解为一种信念,即那些被种族化为华人的人享有社会政治优势。我们从Ahmed (2004b)的“粘性”概念中得到启发,来思考(1)根植于白人的西方种族化权力观念如何在后殖民时代的新加坡被重新配置;(2)种族化和种族分类的过程在对华人特权的指责和忏悔中被不加批判地复制。我们将粘性种族语言学的概念解释为种族语言同化与白人移民殖民思想的先行中心的不可分割性。
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Signs and Society
Signs and Society Multiple-
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
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