Here is your pdf: Settler Colonialism as Structure: A Framework for Comparative Studies of U.S. Race and Gender Formation by Evelyn Nakano Glenn

The length of the document below is: 21 page(s) long

The self-declared author(s) is/are:
www.asanet.org

The subject is as follows:
Subject: Original authors did not specify.

The original URL is: LINK

The access date was:
Access date: 2019-04-12 13:46:46.232897

Please be aware that this may be under copyright restrictions. Please send an email to admin@pharmacoengineering.com for any AI-generated issues.

Loader Loading...
EAD Logo Taking too long?

Reload Reload document
| Open Open in new tab

The content is as follows:

Sociology of Race and Ethnicity 2015, Vol. 1(1) 54 Œ74© American Sociological Association 2014

DOI: 10.1177/2332649214560440

sre.sagepub.comCurrent (and Future) Theoretical Debates in Sociology of Race and EthnicityIn this article I argue for the necessity of a settler

colonialism framework for an historically grounded

and inclusive analysis of U.S. race and gender for-mation. A settler colonialism framework can

encompass the specificities of racisms and sexisms

affecting different racialized groupsŠespecially

Native Americans, blacks, Latinos, and Asian

AmericansŠwhile also highlighting structural and

cultural factors that undergird and link these rac

isms and sexisms. I offer here a first rough sketch

of a settler colonialismŒframed analysis of racial

formation in certain critical periods and places in

the United States. I engage with recent theoretical

work that views settler colonialism as a distinct

transnational formation whose political and eco-

nomic projects have shaped and continue to shape

race relations in first world nations that were estab-

lished through settler colonialism. My aim is to

avoid lumping all racisms together, even for the

benign purpose of promoting cross-race alliances to fight racial injustice. Equally, I wish to avoid

seeing racisms affecting various groups as com

pletely separate and unrelated. Rather, I endeavor

to uncover some of the articulations among differ

-ent racisms that would suggest more effective

bases for cross-group alliances.In the latter regard, one implication of taking settler colonialism seriously is to advance decolo-

nization as a necessary goal in the quest to achieve

race and gender justice. Indeed, the elaboration of

the settler colonialism framework has been closely

paralleled by the development of decolonial cri-

tiques of racial justice projects that aim to achieve

liberal inclusion, rather than liberation, of 560440SREXXX10.1177/2332649214560440Sociology of Race and Ethnicity

Glennresearch-article

20141University of California, Berkeley, CA, USACorresponding Author:Evelyn Nakano Glenn, University of California, 506

Barrows Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720.2570, USA.

Email: englenn@berkeley.eduSettler Colonialism as Structure: A Framework for

Comparative Studies of U.S.

Race and Gender FormationEvelyn Nakano Glenn1AbstractUnderstanding settler colonialism as an ongoing structure rather than a past historical event serves as

the basis for an historically grounded and inclusive analysis of U.S. race and gender formation. The settler

goal of seizing and establishing property rights over land and resources required the removal of indigenes,

which was accomplished by various forms of direct and indirect violence, including militarized genocide.

Settlers sought to control space, resources, and people not only by occupying land but also by establishing

an exclusionary private property regime and coercive labor systems, including chattel slavery to work the

land, extract resources, and build infrastructure. I examine the various ways in which the development of

a white settler U.S. state and political economy shaped the race and gender formation of whites, Native

Please note all content on this page was automatically generated via our AI-based algorithm (BishopKingdom ID: 24zdXoH8XvCMi24ZF4xX). Please let us know if you find any errors.