Bemerkung: |
Notes on contributorsAcknowledgementsNote on the cover imageIntroduction: racial disavowals - historicising whiteness in Central and Eastern Europe - James Mark, Anikó Imre, Bogdan C. Iacob and Catherine Baker1 Wilsons white world: the foundation of Central-Eastern European nation-states after World War I - James Mark2 The racial contract, whiteness contract, and Central Europe - Bolaji Balogun3 Not quite white: Russians as Turanians in nineteenth-century Polish thought - Maciej Górny4 Racial thinking among Czech anthropologists: the case of Vojtech Suk - Victoria Shmidt5 Hungarian Indians: race and colonialism in Hungarian Indian play - Zoltán Ginelli6 Peripheral whiteness and racial belonging and non-belonging: accounts from Albania - Chelsi West Ohueri7 The aesthetics of alternation and the returns of race: Poland and the Jewish Question - Sudeep Dasgupta8 Retailored for a Soviet spectator: racial difference and whiteness in the films of the 1930s to the early 1950s - Irina Novikova9 With the help of the great Russian people: the (invisible) whiteness of Soviet anti-colonialism and gender emancipation from Central Asia to Khartoum - Yulia Gradskova10 The whiteness of Christian Europe: the case of Hungary - Paul Hanebrink11 Alien at home, white overseas: the Polish interwar Maritime and Colonial League and the Jewish Question - Marta Grzechnik12 Midsommar and the production of white fantasy - Anikó Imre13 In pursuit of Western modernity: Russian-speaking migrants claiming whiteness in Helsinki - Daria Krivonos14 The perpetual foreigner in Serbia: on being marked and unmarked in a raceless state - Sunnie Rucker-Chang15 Re-routing Eastern European whiteness: relational racialisation and historical proximity - Spela Drnovsek Zorko16 Through the Balkans to Christchurch: Southeast Europe and global white nationalist historical mythology - Catherine BakerIndex
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Rezension/en: |
--Oou--Marsheva, Anastasiia [Tnu]. [Off white. Central and Eastern Europe and the Global History of Race. Hrsg. von Catherine Baker, Bogdan C. Iacob, Anikó Imre und James Mark], 2025
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Zusammenfassung: |
Off white centres the role of race and whiteness to rewrite the history of Central and Eastern Europe and illuminate the development, operation and enduring appeal of white nationalisms within racial capitalism
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