(36.)
Vron Ware, 'Info-war and the politics of feminist curiosity', Cultural Studies 20(6).
personnel, see
Vron Ware, Military Migrants: Fighting for Your Country
(19)
Vron Ware, Beyond the Pale: White Women, Racism and History,
Vron Ware, Social Sciences, The Open University Dr.
(1.) Horrell here quotes
Vron Ware in V Ware and L Back, Out of Whiteness; Color, Politics and Culture (2002).
(7) Some good yet diverse examples of books on white racialization are the social historical work of David Roediger (1991) and Matthew Frye Jacobson (1999), studies in English literature by Toni Morrison (1993) and Valerie Babb (1998), cultural studies by Mike Hill (2004) and
Vron Ware and Les Back (2002), and George Yancy's (2004) collection of essays in philosophy.
Ware,
Vron. Beyond the Pale: White Women, Racism, and History.
This was later taken up by cultural critics like David Roediger, Ruth Frankenberg and
Vron Ware.
I WAS interested to hear that a CD release by the
Vron Welsh Male Voice Choir has become the fastest-selling classical album ever.
As
Vron Ware argues, (12) Anglo-Protestant women cannot be separated from their formative locations in a White supremacist context, playing significant roles in the effort to fortify particular versions of Whiteness during a period in which mass immigration was transforming the American landscape and a Whiteness deemed authentic enabled U.S.
Gemmell in his Presidential Address to the North of England Obstetrical and Gynaecological Society in 1903, quoted in
Vron Ware, Beyond the Pale: White Women, Racism and History (London, 1992), 35.
Rutherdale's approach to the women's colonial discourse has been influenced by, among other perspectives, Edward Said's arguments about the ways in which writing by colonial elites, often ignorant about their subjects, "reinforce[d] the economic and political imperatives of empire,"(xxiii) by Homi Bhabha whose work zeroes in on the "contact zone itself [and] provides a way to go beyond the colonized/colonizer dichotomy,"(xxiii) and by
Vron Ware, more popular perhaps a decade ago, and among the first feminist scholars to recognize the interconnectedness of race, class, gender, and imperialist ideology.