Race(ing) intercultural communication : racial logics in a colorblind era
2017
Introduction - A Politic of Disruption: Race(ing) Intercultural Communication Dreama G. Moon and Michelle A. Holling 1. The Rhetorics of Racial Power: Enforcing Colorblindness in Post-Apartheid Scholarship on Race Marzia Milazzo 2. Queer Intercultural Relationality: An Autoethnography of Asian-Black (Dis)Connections in White Gay America Shinsuke Eguchi 3. The Construction of Brownness: Latino/a and South Asian Bloggers' Responses to SB 1070 Anjana Mudambi 4. Resisting Whiteness: Mexican American Studies and Rhetorical Struggles for Visibility Chad M. Nelson 5. Our Foreign President Barack Obama: The Racial Logics of Birther Discourses Vincent N. Pham 6. New Media, Old Racisms: Twitter, Miss America, and Cultural Logics of Race J. David Cisneros and Thomas K. Nakayama 7. (Net)roots of Belonging: Contemporary Discourses of (In)valuability and Post-Racial Citizenship in the United States Megan Elizabeth Morrissey 8. Problematic Representations of Strategic Whiteness and "Post-racial" Pedagogy: A Critical Intercultural Reading of "The Help" Rachel Alicia Griffin 9. "My Family Isn't Racist-However...": Multiracial/Multicultural Obama-ism as an Ideological Barrier to Teaching Intercultural Communication Yea-Wen Chen, Nathaniel Simmons & Dongjing Kang Conclusion - Continuing a Politic of Disruption: Race(ing) Intercultural Communication Michelle A. Holling and Dreama G. Moon
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