<p>Multicultural Horizons reveals that cultural and racial differences are inescapably caught up in the signification of surfaces: whether these are attached to media visualities or to the prescriptive and judgmental gazes of institutions or neighbours. Fortier's contribution is to show how these inscriptions are embedded in and animated by actual bodies whose singularity is obliterated by being repeatedly called upon to prove their allegiances on the very grounds of their differences in an obsessive and dehumanising cycle.</p><p>Sneja Gunew </p><p>University of British Columbia, Canada </p><p>More systematically than any other work before it, this book puts emotions and the affective body at the centre of inter-cultural relations. This not only yields a sharper and more nuanced understanding of those relations, it also opens up a far richer 'horizon', as the author puts it, for thinking the future. As such this book must be read by all those interested in multiculturalism whether as academics, as activists, public servants or community workers.</p><p>Ghassan Hage</p><p>University of Melbourne, Australia </p><p><strong>'...an ambitious and innovative agenda...'</strong></p><p><strong>'Multicultural Horizons is a slim book that packs in a lot of ideas.'</strong>-<em>Karim Murji, The Open University, in Cultural Sociology</em></p>
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Anne-Marie Fortier is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at Lancaster University. Her research interests revolve around critical race studies, critical migration studies, feminist, queer and postcolonial theory. She is the author of Migrant Belongings (2000) and co-editor of Uprootings/Regroundings (2003).