Racing Research, Researching Race

Methodological Dilemmas in Critical Race Studies

France Winddance Twine editor Jonathan Warren editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:New York University Press

Should be back in stock very soon

Racing Research, Researching Race cover

An examination of the influence of race and racism on the research experience
A white woman studies upper-class eighth grade girls at her alma mater on Long Island and finds a culture founded on misinformation about its own racial and class identity. A Black American researcher is repeatedly assumed by many Brazilian subjects to be a domestic servant or sex worker. Through encounters such as these, Racing Research, Researching Race explores how ideologies of race and racism intersect with nationality and gender to shape the research experience.
Critical work in race studies has not adequately addressed how racial positions in the field—as inflected by nationality, gender, and age—generate numerous methodological dilemmas. Racing Research, Researching Race works to fill this gap by infusing critical race studies with empirical work and suggesting how a critical race perspective might improve research methodologies and outcomes.
Featuring contributions from scholars working across anthropology, sociology, ethnic studies, women’s studies, political science, and Asian American studies, this volume offers new perspectives anyone embarking on research in their field.

"A remarkable collection of essays interrogating the political, methodological and ethical dilemmas of conducting research in racially stratified societies. These theoretically astute and ethnographically rich case studies compellingly demonstrate how the production of knowledge is framed and mediated by the racialized subject positions held by social scientists. Racing Research, Researching Race will no doubt incite a critical and long overdue discussion of the racial politics of ethnographic fieldwork." -- Steven Gregory,author of Black Corona, and Professor of Africana and American Studies at New York University
"Absolutely critical reading. This volume powerfully explores how scholars' own racial background shapes the analytical lens with which they view whiteness, blackness . . . the exoticism and eroticism of racial ‘others' and the domain of white privilege." -- William Darity Jr., Samuel DuBois Cook Distinguished Professor of Public Policy at Duke University
"Essential reading for all those whose research explicitly engages racial issues, and for all those who do not realize that their work inevitably engages racial issues." -- Ruth Frankenberg, author of White Women, Race Matters and editor of Displacing Whiteness: Essays in Cultural Criticism
"Points to the ethical dilemmas of researchers researching race among communities that are at once ‘victims' of racism and active in the continued process of racialization." -- Rinaldo Walcott,author of Black Like Who?, and Professor of Humanities, York University (Canada)
"Timely and challenging, this innovative book engages questions and dilemmas that researchers on race and racism rarely talk about in public. Refreshingly clear and comparative in scope, it is a must reading in all courses about race and ethnic relations, calling for a fundamental rethinking of research agendas in this field." -- John Solomos, Professor of Sociology, University of Warwick

ISBN: 9780814782422

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 386g

296 pages