Colorblind Tools

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A01=Marzia Milazzo
Anti-Blackness
art
Author_Marzia Milazzo
Brazil
Category=JBSL
Colorblindness
Cuba
discrimination
empire
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ethnic Studies
Eugenics
Latin America
Law
Literature
Mexico
Panama
Philosophy
racism
Sociology
South Africa
United States
Whiteness

Product details

  • ISBN 9780810145269
  • Weight: 256g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 226mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Oct 2022
  • Publisher: Northwestern University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A study of anti-Blackness and white supremacy across four continents demonstrates that colorblindness is neither new nor a subtype of racist ideology, but a constitutive technology of racism

In Colorblind Tools, Marzia Milazzo offers a transnational account of anti-Blackness and white supremacy that pushes against the dominant emphasis on historical change pervading current racial theory. This emphasis on change, she contends, misses critical lessons from the past.

Bringing together a capacious archive of texts on race produced in Brazil, Cuba, Mexico, Panama, the United States, and South Africa from multiple disciplines and genres, Milazzo uncovers transnational continuities in structural racism and white supremacist discourse from the inception of colonial modernity to the present. In the process, she traces the global workings of what she calls colorblind tools: technologies and strategies that at once camouflage and reproduce white domination. Whether examining Rijno van der Riet’s defense of slavery in the Cape Colony, discourses of racial mixture in Latin American eugenics and their reverberations in contemporary scholarship, the pitfalls of white “antiracism,” or Chicana indigenist aesthetics, Milazzo illustrates how white people collectively disavow racism to maintain power across national boundaries, and how anti-Black and colonial logics can be reproduced even in some decolonial literatures. Milazzo’s groundbreaking study proves that colorblindness is not new, nor is it a subtype of racist ideology or a hallmark of our era. It is a constitutive technology of racism—a tool the master cannot do without.

Marzia Milazzo is an associate professor of English at the University of Johannesburg.

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