Whiteness and loss in Outer East London ACCEPTED.pdf (176.25 kB)
Whiteness and loss in Outer East London: tracing the collective memories of diaspora space
This paper explores collective memory in Newham, East London. It addresses how remembering East London as the home of whiteness and traditional forms of community entails powerful forms of forgetting. Newham’s formation through migration, its ‘great time’, has ensured that myths of indigeneity and whiteness have never stood still. Through engaging with young people’s and youth workers’ memory practices, the paper explores how phantasms of whiteness and class loss are traced over, and how this tracing reveals ambivalence and porosity, at the same time as it highlights the continued allure of race. It explores how whiteness and class loss are appropriated across ethnic boundaries and how they are mobilized to produce new forms of racial hierarchy in a ‘super-diverse’ place.
History
Publication status
- Published
File Version
- Accepted version
Journal
Ethnic and Racial StudiesISSN
0141-9870Publisher
Taylor & FrancisExternal DOI
Issue
4Volume
37Page range
652-667Department affiliated with
- Media and Film Publications
Full text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes