White Nation: Fantasies of White Supremacy in a Multicultural SocietyPluto Press, 1998 - 280 sivua Using the experience of immigration policy and the rise of Pauline Hanson's neo-fascist One Nation party in Australia, Hage (anthropology, U. of Sydney) argues that white racists and tolerant multiculturists both see their nation structured around a white culture that they control, with aboriginal people and migrants as exotic objects. His study was first published in 1998 by Pluto Press in Australia and Comerford and Miller in Britain. c. Book News Inc. |
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Aboriginal accumulate AESP analysis Anglo Anglo-Celtic argued aristocratic Asian assimilation Australian society become Blainey Bourdieu British capacity Casey chapter clearly colonial constitutes constructed discourse of decline domesticated ecological essentialisation ethnic caging examine exhibited fact fantasy space feel Geoffrey Blainey Ghassan Hage governmental belonging Hansonites ibid ideal imaginary imagined immigration debates important Interviewer intolerance Lebanese logic manager Marrickville migrants mode Muslim national aristocracy national belonging national capital national space nationalist practices nature object one's Paul Keating Pauline Hanson perceived Pierre Bourdieu political position practices of exclusion race racist racist violence reality recognise relation Ron Casey scarf sense Slavoj Zizek social spatial specific struggle Sydney Morning Herald symbolic symbolic violence Third World-looking tion tolerance tural UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA valorisation White Australia Policy White Australians White fantasy White multiculturalism White nation fantasy White nationalist worry Zizek