Navigating whiteness from the margins: Finnish, Somali, and Arabic speakers’ experiences of racialization, (in)visibility, and (im)mobility in Gothenburg, Sweden

Author:

Löfdahl Maria1ORCID,Järlehed Johan2ORCID,Wojahn Daniel3ORCID,Milani Tommaso M.2,Rosendal Tove4,Nielsen Helle Lykke5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Archives and Research , Institute for Language and Folklore , Arkivgatan 9A , 411 34 Gothenburg , Sweden

2. Department of Swedish, Multilingualism, Language Technology , University of Gothenburg , Box 200 , 40530 Gothenburg , Sweden

3. Department of Culture and Education , Södertörn University , 141 89 , Stockholm , Sweden

4. Department of Languages and Literatures , University of Gothenburg , Box 200 , 40530 Gothenburg , Sweden

5. Department of Language, Culture, History and Communication , University of Southern Denmark , Campusvej 55 , 5230 Odense M , Denmark

Abstract

Abstract This paper examines the relationship between language, (in)visibility, and (im)mobility in racialized spaces, focusing on Finnish, Somali, and Arabic speakers in Sweden. Using a theoretical framework based on hegemonic whiteness and intersectionality, the study explores how multilingual practices and subjectivities intersect with race, religion, gender, and class to shape social visibility and mobility. The research draws on linguistic ethnographic data, including interviews, linguistic landscape documentation, and an analysis of the media discourse. The study finds that while Finnish speakers have become invisible due to assimilation policies, Somali and Arabic speakers are hypervisible in Swedish public spaces and discourse, although Arabic speakers are sometimes, and in relation to other migrants, nearing Swedish whiteness. However, all three languages and their speakers are constrained by a white normativity that reproduces inequality. The paper challenges simplistic notions of mobility/immobility and visibility/invisibility in the context of a changing racial order in Sweden, where whiteness serves as a binary sorting mechanism that perpetuates inequality. Overall, this research sheds light on the complex entanglement of language, visibility, and mobility in white spaces and contributes to a more nuanced understanding of the intersectional dynamics of race and language.

Funder

Swedish Research Council

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Communication,Language and Linguistics

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2. Aharon, Anna & Maria Löfdahl. 2022. Arabiska i Göteborgs språkliga landskap. In Rapporter från Språkrådet, vol. 20. Stockholm: Institutet för språk och folkminnen.

3. Ahmed, Sara. 2007. A phenomenology of whiteness. Feminist Theory 8(2). 149–168. https://doi.org/10.1177/1464700107078139.

4. Anthias, Floya. 2008. Thinking through the lens of translocational positionality: An intersectionality frame for understanding identity and belonging. Translocations: Migration and Social Change 4(1). 5–20.

5. Ågren, Marja. 2006. “Är du finsk, eller-?”: En etnologisk studie om att växa upp och leva med finsk bakgrund i Sverige. Gothenburg: University of Gothenburg dissertation.

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