"Dealing the Race Card: Public Discourse on the Policing of Winnipeg's Inner-City Communities" (Report) "Dealing the Race Card: Public Discourse on the Policing of Winnipeg's Inner-City Communities" (Report)

"Dealing the Race Card: Public Discourse on the Policing of Winnipeg's Inner-City Communities" (Report‪)‬

Canadian Journal of Urban Research 2010, Summer, 19, 1

    • $5.99
    • $5.99

Publisher Description

Abstract Our paper uses online comments posted in response to news items reporting the police shooting death of a young Aboriginal man to map out the ways in which power works through discourse. Specifically, we ask: how does this public discourse reproduce racial privilege? Our analysis shows that the majority of posters draw upon a 'discourse of denial' that de-historicizes the event and a 'discourse of responsibilization' that individualizes it. In the process, both discourses rely on a racialized dichotomy of 'Us versus Them' in which not just the deceased young man, but all Aboriginal peoples, become othered. We argue that while posters accuse Aboriginal peoples of 'playing the race' card when they connect McDougall's death to 'race' and racism, they are actually the ones 'dealing a card': the card of racial privilege. We conclude with a consideration of the role that research on Winnipeg's inner-city communities can perform in challenging this racialized discourse.

GENRE
Non-Fiction
RELEASED
2010
22 June
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
26
Pages
PUBLISHER
Institute of Urban Studies
SELLER
The Gale Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation and an affiliate of Cengage Learning, Inc.
SIZE
221.6
KB

More Books Like This

The Toronto Mayor and Mombassa Natives (Mel Lastman) The Toronto Mayor and Mombassa Natives (Mel Lastman)
2003
Re-configuring Anti-racism Re-configuring Anti-racism
2018
Words That Wound Words That Wound
2018
Media Matters Media Matters
2016
Race and the City: Series One (Report) Race and the City: Series One (Report)
2009
Violence Against Black Bodies Violence Against Black Bodies
2017

More Books by Canadian Journal of Urban Research

Criteria for Best Practices in Building Child-Friendly Cities: Involving Young People in Urban Planning and Design (Research Note) Criteria for Best Practices in Building Child-Friendly Cities: Involving Young People in Urban Planning and Design (Research Note)
2004
Chiras, Dan and Dave Wann: Superbia! 31 Ways to Create Sustainable Neighborhoods (The Key to Sustainable Cities) (Book Review) Chiras, Dan and Dave Wann: Superbia! 31 Ways to Create Sustainable Neighborhoods (The Key to Sustainable Cities) (Book Review)
2004
Linking Social Exclusion and Health: Explorations in Contrasting Neighbourhoods in Hamilton, Ontario (Report) Linking Social Exclusion and Health: Explorations in Contrasting Neighbourhoods in Hamilton, Ontario (Report)
2007
The Ironies of New Urbanism (Report) The Ironies of New Urbanism (Report)
2006
"I Want to See These Words Turned Into Action": Neoliberalism and Urban Housing for Elderly People of Aboriginal Origin (Report) "I Want to See These Words Turned Into Action": Neoliberalism and Urban Housing for Elderly People of Aboriginal Origin (Report)
2010
Naming Systemic Violence in Winnipeg's Street Sex Trade (Report) Naming Systemic Violence in Winnipeg's Street Sex Trade (Report)
2010