Race in Translation
Culture Wars around the Postcolonial Atlantic
Author(s)
Shohat, Ella
Stam, Robert
Language
EnglishAbstract
While the term “culture wars” often designates the heated arguments in the English-speaking world spiraling around race, the canon, and affirmative action, in fact these discussions have raged in diverse sites and languages. Race in Translation charts the transatlantic traffic of the debates within and between three zones—the U.S., France, and Brazil. Stam and Shohat trace the literal and figurative translation of these multidirectional intellectual debates, seen most recently in the emergence of postcolonial studies in France, and whiteness studies in Brazil. The authors also interrogate an ironic convergence whereby rightist politicians like Sarkozy and Cameron join hands with some leftist intellectuals like Benn Michaels, Žižek, and Bourdieu in condemning “multiculturalism” and “identity politics.” At once a report from various “fronts” in the culture wars, a mapping of the germane literatures, and an argument about methods of reading the cross-border movement of ideas, the book constitutes a major contribution to our understanding of the Diasporic and the Transnational.
Keywords
Social and cultural anthropologyDOI
10.18574/nyu/9780814798379.001.0001ISBN
9780814723920, 9780814798379, 9780814723920, 9780814723920Publisher
New York University PressPublication date and place
New York, 2012Imprint
NYU PressClassification
Social and cultural anthropology