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跨种族主义:夏威夷工人阶级的意识形态转型

Interracialism: The Ideological Transformation of Hawaii's Working Class

American Sociological Review · 2003
被引 3
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

批判了将跨种族主义视为去种族化的主流观点,通过分析1930-40年代夏威夷跨种族工人运动,论证左翼阶级意识形态并非抹除种族差异,而是重新连接了种族与阶级,为理解跨种族主义提供了新视角。

Abstract

A normative desire for interracialism undergirds and structures the sociology of race. However, focusing almost exclusively on racial divisions and conflicts, the sociology of race rarely subjects interracialism to explicit analysis. One consequence of this somewhat peculiar situation is that interracialism is understood negatively, as deracialization—the removal of racism. Even the few studies that appear to redress this negativity through explicit analysis reproduce it. Prototypically, there has long been a scholarly consensus that Hawaii's interracial working-class movement of the late 1930s and 1940s presupposed deracialization: that a “colorblind” class ideology, advanced by the left-led International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union, effaced racial divisions. Refuting this interpretation, this paper demonstrates that a deracializing class ideology was not straightforwardly adopted by Hawaii's racially divided workers. Instead, a leftist ideology of class served as the initial pivot for an affirmative transformation of race, producing an interracial ideology that rearticulated, rather than disarticulated, race and class. The paper concludes with several implications of reconceptualizing interracialism affirmatively.

种族社会学劳工研究意识形态阶级形成夏威夷研究