Race and ethnicity II: Skin and other intimaciesPosted in Articles, Media Archive on 2013-07-12 01:36Z by Steven |
Race and ethnicity II: Skin and other intimacies
Progress in Human Geography
Volume 37, Number 4 (August 2013)
pages 578-586
DOI: 10.1177/0309132512465719
Patricia L. Price, Professor of Geography
Florida International University
The intimate turn in geography has centralized approaches to race and ethnicity which foreground bodily encounters. The quirky spatialities of intimacy, involving not just proximities but also distancing and borders, operate in racial and ethnic ‘contact zones’. Skin is one of these, and it is central to an understanding of race and ethnicity as arising through bodily encounters in places. Geographic scholarship emphasizing embodied racial and ethnic topics has highlighted processes of approximation, distancing, and bordering in race and ethnicity as lived events. Set within the intimate turn, this work has the potential to inform geographers and geographic scholarship with respect to criticality, the stickiness of place, and visceral geographies. In addition, the need to elucidate further the relationship between race and ethnicity is underscored.
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