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Geopower in public spaces of Darwin, Australia: exploring forces that unsettle phenotypical racism

journal contribution
posted on 2016-01-01, 00:00 authored by Michele LoboMichele Lobo
ABSTRACT: This paper reports the results of ethnographic research conducted in Darwin, a north Australian city with a growing population of Aboriginals and migrant newcomers. It is situated within the emerging literature on race, encounter, and affect and explores how events of phenotypical racism unfold in public spaces of the city. The paper argues that negative affects of hurt, anger, and frustration that saturate places through events of coding, labelling, and judging bodies hypervisible through phenotype have the potential to mutate through attention to forces in a more-than-human world. This paper shows that Elizabeth Grosz's concept of ‘geopower’, a non-human form of power that precedes and exceeds human social relations, provides the possibility to reconfigure anti-racist agendas – bodies of colour not only maintain minimum human dignity but affirm life and learn to live ethically with difference.

History

Journal

Ethnic and Racial Studies

Volume

39

Issue

1

Pagination

68 - 86

ISSN

0141-9870

eISSN

1466-4356

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Taylor & Francis