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Article
Between the structural and the personal: Raceless diversity, racial pivoting and situated sense-makings of “Race.”
Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies (2006)
  • Rona T. Halualani, San Jose State University
  • Deanna L. Fassett, San Jose State University
  • Jennifer Morrison, University of Denver
  • Patrick Dodge, University of Denver
Abstract
Using a critical intercultural communication perspective and cultural studies interviewing method, this study traces individuals’ subjective sense-makings of diversity through the trope of “race.” Such sense-makings represent the key (and taken-for-granted) locus of the structural and personal where social actors live out the constructions of diversity and race in deeply felt ways. Our study reveals how individuals articulate and understand race via raceless diversity encodings (whereby race is seemingly stripped of its power inequalities, and all racial/ethnic groups are made equal) and racial pivoting (whereby participants both discursively pull away from and move toward race to suit their individual experiences).
Keywords
  • Critical Intercultural Communication Studies,
  • Race,
  • Racial Pivoting,
  • Cultural Studies
Disciplines
Publication Date
2006
DOI
10.1080/14791420500505700
Publisher Statement
SJSU users: use the following link to login and access the article via SJSU databases
Citation Information
Rona T. Halualani, Deanna L. Fassett, Jennifer Morrison and Patrick Dodge. "Between the structural and the personal: Raceless diversity, racial pivoting and situated sense-makings of “Race.”" Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies Vol. 3 Iss. 1 (2006) p. 70 - 93 ISSN: 1479-1420
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/deanna_fassett/9/