Urban space is being colonized and gentrified by invisible forces such as urbanism and white domination according to a new Wiley-Blackwell publication –“Cities of Whiteness”.

Melbourne, Australia, — 20 November 2007 — Urban space is being colonized and gentrified by invisible forces such as urbanism and white domination according to a new Wiley-Blackwell publication –“Cities of Whiteness”.

The book tackles the phenomenon of the erosion of diverse urban and how indiscernible factors such as racialism, white superiority and urban politics can work to enhance existing beliefs in entitlement to postcolonial urban spaces.

Author of Cities of Whiteness, Wendy S. Shaw, presents a foray into the range of the ‘racialization’ processes that have manifested with the re-colonization of inner Sydney. By challenging the existing notion of urban change, ‘racialization’ and cosmopolitan urbanism, she contends for better understanding of the power of whiteness. She argues that whiteness is a process of privileging rather than an ethnicity or race.

A senior lecturer in Geography at the University of New South Wales, Ms. Shaw said, “My aim is to unearth specific processes of whiteness that marginalize and exclude the Aboriginal community from its privileging capacities.”

Cities of Whiteness traces the rise of a culture of besiegement in the Aboriginal neighborhood to unveil some of the damage already wrought by activations of whiteness and encourage more positive engagements between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians in inner Sydney and beyond.

Chapters in Cities of Whiteness include:

Outlines the theoretical debates that underpin the arguments throughout the book.
Traces the rise of a culture of the defensiveness of urban spaces and its link to white besiegement

Details key types of urban transformation that exemplifies a historical geography of ‘racialization’

Details recent and subtler processes of whiteness

Demonstrates Sydney as one of many ‘cities of whiteness’.

“The new formations have engaged strategies of exclusivity regardless of Sydney’s ‘multiculturalism’. The acts of defensiveness and aggression couples with denial and indifference are characteristic of these new urbanisms”, said Ms. Shaw.

She added, “By exposing moments that highlight the capacities of whiteness as it occurs allow new ways of untangling the processes of ‘racialized’ empowerment that inhibit the evolving city”.

aboey's picture

Posted November 20th, 2007 by aboey

0
vote

Your comments...

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <p> <br> <a> <em> <ul> <ol> <li> <strong> <blockquote>

More information about formatting options

8 + 3 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.