Brings Jane H. Hill's groundbreaking work into conversation with a broad and interdisciplinary range of contemporary literature on language and racism in the United States When it was first published in 2008, Jane H. Hill's The Everyday Language of White Racism presented an unprecedented critical discourse analysis of the relationship between language, race, and culture. Investigating the linguistic landscape through the lenses of White racial projects and the White folk theory of race and racism, Hill revealed the underlying racist stereotypes that permeate White American culture to this day. Now in its second edition, The Everyday Language of White Racism provides up-to-date resources for analytical conversations on the racial issues that continue to limit and endanger BIPOC individuals and communities. New academic essays by leading scholars address topics such as racial profiling, police violence, linguistic appropriation, White nationalism, White fragility, and various forms of systemic racism within Hill's broader theoretical framework. Editors Christina Leza, Barbra A. Meek, and Jacqueline H. E. Messing provide new chapter-by-chapter annotations that clarify and contextualize theoretical concepts, new discussion questions focused on contemporary racial issues, and recent statistical data on U. S. racial gaps in a variety of categories. Including access to a companion website with additional resources, The Everyday Language of White Racism, Second Edition remains an essential textbook for undergraduate and graduate courses on critical race studies and linguistic anthropology across the humanities and social sciences.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Editors' Acknowledgments viii
Editors' Preface to the Second Edition ix
Preface and Acknowledgments xiv
About the Companion Website xviii
1 The Persistence of White Racism 1
2 Language in White Racism: An Overview 38
3 The Social Life of Slurs 56
4 Gaffes: Racist Talk Without Racists 93
5 Covert Racist Discourse: Metaphors, Mocking, and the Racialization of Historically Spanish-speaking Populations in the United States 124
6 Linguistic Appropriation: The History of White Racism Is Embedded in American English 165
7 Everyday Language, White Racist Culture, Respect, and Civility 184
Notes 193
The Social Life of Slurs Revisited 205
Adam Hodges Copyrighted Material
Cosmopolitan Affectations, Codeswitching Ideologies, and Counterfeit Immigrants in the Hilaria Baldwin "Cucumber" Affair 218
Norma Mendoza-Denton
The Possibilities and Perils of Mock Spanish 231
Elaine W. Chun
Linguistic Appropriation: Admiration, Hatred, and Exploitation in Racial Relief 240
John Baugh
Index 250