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- W2076400968 abstract "Abstract Despite societal norms of tolerance and diversity, covert racism (Henry and Tator 2006) flourishes in Canada on individual and systemic levels. Democratic racism, an ideology that allows the coexistence of both egalitarian values and racist attitudes, beliefs, and behaviours, is often expressed by the dominant group through powerful discourses that shape the social reality for many minority individuals. However, racist discourses, such as blaming the target of racism and denying that racism exists, are often manifested very subtly. In this article, we use racism as a framework to investigate the multiple ways in which our participants--South Asian Canadian women--described their experiences of A discourse analysis of participants' talk revealed that they used various rhetorical strategies and discursive devices to avoid attributing negative experiences as Surprisingly, we found that the same discourses used by the dominant group to dismiss and erase racism are available to, and are also utilized by, members of visible minority groups. We conclude by discussing possible reasons why participants in the study might deny We also note the societal implication of such denial: racism becomes invisible, both to the perpetrators and the targets, and systemic inequalities and injustices remain unchallenged. Resume Malgre les normes societales de tolerance et de diversite, un racisme > sous-jacent (Henry and Tator 2006) fleurit au Canada a deux niveaux : individuel et systemique. Ideologie qui permet la coexistence a la fois de valeurs d'egalite et d'attitudes, de croyances et de comportements raciaux, il impregne souvent un discours drastique tenu par le groupe dominant et qui altere la realite sociale vecue par nombre de personnes minoritaires. Le racisme, cependant, se manifeste souvent de maniere tres subtile, par exemple en blamant sa cible et en niant sa propre existence. Dans cet article, sa forme democratique nous sert de cadre pour enqueter sur les multiples facons dont nos participantes--des Canadiennes sud-asiatiques--decrivent leur experience dans ce domaine. Une analyse discursive de leurs propos revele qu'elles se servent de strategies rhetoriques et de moyens d'expression varies pour eviter d'attribuer au racisme des experiences negatives. Nous avons etonnamment decouvert que le discours employe par les membres de groupes de minorites visibles etait le meme que celui dont se sert le groupe dominant pour dementir et gommer son racisme. Nous concluons en analysant les raisons possibles qui porteraient les participantes a cette etude a un tel deni. Nous en notons aussi les implications societales : le racisme devient invisible, et pour les auteurs, et pour leurs cibles; par ailleurs, aucune contestation ne remet en question les inegalites et les injustices systemiques. ********** Canada has often been viewed as a colourblind or raceless country (Stewart 2004), and the norms of Canadian society appear to promote tolerance and encourage diversity. However, Henry and Tator (1994, 2002, 2006) argue that, contrary to popular belief, racism flourishes in Canada on individual, institutional, and ideological levels. Their argument is supported by results from the Ethnic Diversity Survey (2002) which indicate that 36% of visible minority Canadians have recently encountered discrimination or unfair treatment. According to Henry and Tator (1994), Canadians reduce the dissonance between their democratic, liberal values and the racist beliefs which permeate the social system through democratic racism. Democratic racism is an ideology that allows the coexistence of both egalitarian values (such as fairness and equality), as well as non-egalitarian values (e.g., negative attitudes, feelings, and behaviours toward people of colour). The justificatory arguments and obfuscation that are characteristic of this ideology permit racist beliefs to be retained and manifested within an ostensibly country. …" @default.
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- W2076400968 date "2009-01-01" @default.
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- W2076400968 title "Discourses of “Democratic Racism“ in the Talk of South Asian Canadian Women" @default.
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- W2076400968 doi "https://doi.org/10.1353/ces.0.0026" @default.
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