'Campaigns Against "Blackness"': Criminality, Civility, and Election to Executive Office

Date

2009

Authors

James, Joy

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Critical Sociology

Abstract

‘Campaigns against “Blackness”’ focuses on the 2008 Democratic presidential primary waged by Barack Obama and the 2006 Massachusetts gubernatorial race run by Deval Patrick. It explores racial bias expressed against and by African-American males seeking high office. In these campaigns, the convergence of racial uplift and multicultural democracy manifests in mandates against blackness represented as criminality and political incivility. Historically, US anti-black anima forged tropes of ‘criminality’ and ‘incivility’ that demonized blacks as unsuitable for full citizenship. Today, the new black candidates successfully deflect these tropes, in part, by redeploying them against non-elites, and anti-racist discourse and activism.

Description

LCSH Subject Headings

Citation

James, Joy. "'Campaigns Against "Blackness"': Criminality, Civility, and Election to Executive Office." Critical Sociology 36.1 (2009): 1-20.

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