Positionings of the black middle-classes: understanding identity construction beyond strategic assimilation |
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Authors: | Ali Meghji |
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Affiliation: | Department of Sociology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK |
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Abstract: | This paper explores the identities of Britain’s black middle-classes. Drawing upon interviews with seventy-two participants, I theorize a ‘triangle of identity’. This triangle emphasizes how black middle-class identities are constructed within the dynamics of three poles. Firstly, there is the class-minded pole whereby class comes to the fore as a conceptual scheme; secondly, there is the ethnoracial autonomous pole whereby ‘race’ is central to one’s identity and whiteness is actively resisted; and lastly there is the strategic assimilation pole, where one continually moves between classed and racialized spheres of action. This tripartite approach to identity builds upon previous research by further exploring the social, cultural and phenomenological distinctions within Britain’s black middle-classes. |
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Keywords: | Black middle-class race and racism positioning theory racial identity intersectionality whiteness |
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