Skip to main content
Article
Racing Left and Right: Colorblind Racism’s Dominance Across the US Political Spectrum
Sociological Quarterly (2017)
  • Meghan A. Burke
Abstract
To date there has been very little scholarship that (1) traces the color-blind rhetoric of liberal or progressive communities, or (2) emphasizes the mainstream, color-blind rhetoric of far-right conservative movements. This article compares the racial politics at two ends of the U.S. political spectrum in order to demonstrate how color-blind ideology constitutes the dominant framework for understanding and discussing race and racial inequality in the United States. This racial ideology transcends political party and ideology, but also motivates individuals to do identity work constructing themselves as transcending racism. Grounded in a racial formations framework, I compare two distinct political locations, one consisting of liberal Democrats and progressives in a diverse urban community and the other among Tea Party organizers in one state, in order to demonstrate the similarities in racial discourse and identities, despite differing political orientations and goals.
Keywords
  • Coded racism,
  • color-blind racism,
  • progressives,
  • Tea Party
Publication Date
Spring 2017
Publisher Statement
The Sociological Quarterly is published by Taylor and Francis, for information please see the journal homepage.
Citation Information
Meghan A. Burke. "Racing Left and Right: Colorblind Racism’s Dominance Across the US Political Spectrum" Sociological Quarterly Vol. 58 Iss. 2 (2017) p. 277 - 294 ISSN: 0038-0253
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/meghan_burke/23/