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Being White and being Black: cross cultural understandings of identity for degree students in the UK and Australia

Being White and being Black: cross cultural understandings of identity for degree students in the UK and Australia
Being White and being Black: cross cultural understandings of identity for degree students in the UK and Australia
The focus on whiteness as a subject of inquiry and analysis in its own right has recently become a popular theme within academic understandings of identity and Otherness. However, such research has primarily focused on the US, this study aims to examine specifically, the social construction and maintenance of Whiteness within tertiary educational settings within Australia and the UK. Little research has explored students' understanding of these issues within the educational context.

Although different in terms of historical and other contexts, Australia, like the UK has a complex relationship and understanding of 'race'. There is little research which takes a comparative perspective in focusing on understandings of Whiteness and its meanings in different cultural environments. The paper will examine such understandings by focusing on degree student’s understandings of whiteness and blackness. Leonardo (2002:31) argues that Whiteness is a racial discourse, whereas the category white people represent is a socially constructed identity. To understand whiteness, however there is also a need to understand blackness or otherness. Bonnett has indicated, Whiteness has developed into a taken-for-granted experience structured upon a varying set of supremacist assumptions (sometimes cultural, sometimes biological, sometimes moral, sometimes all three). Non-White identities, by contrast, have been denied the privileges of normativity, and are marked within the West as marginal and inferior (1997: 188).

This paper will examine the experiences of students' understandings of identity and otherness in relation to Whiteness and Blackness.

identity, black, white, degree students
Bhopal, K.
5ac0970e-1c42-4757-87df-6fdb6f826314
Henry-Waring, M.
e4578784-e2f6-4bb5-a357-d4a1756271de
Bhopal, K.
5ac0970e-1c42-4757-87df-6fdb6f826314
Henry-Waring, M.
e4578784-e2f6-4bb5-a357-d4a1756271de

Bhopal, K. and Henry-Waring, M. (2009) Being White and being Black: cross cultural understandings of identity for degree students in the UK and Australia. British Sociological Association Annual Conference 2009, Cardiff, UK. 15 - 17 Apr 2009.

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

The focus on whiteness as a subject of inquiry and analysis in its own right has recently become a popular theme within academic understandings of identity and Otherness. However, such research has primarily focused on the US, this study aims to examine specifically, the social construction and maintenance of Whiteness within tertiary educational settings within Australia and the UK. Little research has explored students' understanding of these issues within the educational context.

Although different in terms of historical and other contexts, Australia, like the UK has a complex relationship and understanding of 'race'. There is little research which takes a comparative perspective in focusing on understandings of Whiteness and its meanings in different cultural environments. The paper will examine such understandings by focusing on degree student’s understandings of whiteness and blackness. Leonardo (2002:31) argues that Whiteness is a racial discourse, whereas the category white people represent is a socially constructed identity. To understand whiteness, however there is also a need to understand blackness or otherness. Bonnett has indicated, Whiteness has developed into a taken-for-granted experience structured upon a varying set of supremacist assumptions (sometimes cultural, sometimes biological, sometimes moral, sometimes all three). Non-White identities, by contrast, have been denied the privileges of normativity, and are marked within the West as marginal and inferior (1997: 188).

This paper will examine the experiences of students' understandings of identity and otherness in relation to Whiteness and Blackness.

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More information

Published date: 16 April 2009
Venue - Dates: British Sociological Association Annual Conference 2009, Cardiff, UK, 2009-04-15 - 2009-04-17
Keywords: identity, black, white, degree students

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 66013
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/66013
PURE UUID: 9f7f043d-6be2-496f-ae9e-3f00dd8f5ca9

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 20 Apr 2009
Last modified: 10 Dec 2021 16:05

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Contributors

Author: K. Bhopal
Author: M. Henry-Waring

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