Affiliation:
1. Departamento de Antropología Social, Universidad de Granada, Granada, Spain
Abstract
Racism is hardly discussed in Spanish public debates: however, when approached through policy, it is generally understood either as violent acts committed by extremists, or as a matter of stereotypes/prejudices/lack of information about cultural Others. This article focuses on the latter understanding, as performed by Spanish “anti-rumour” strategies, a varied ensemble of initiatives aimed at dismantling stereotypes of migrants and racial minorities, mainly by encouraging better knowledge and empathy. By approaching these initiatives as a representative case of mainstream, psychology-based perspectives on anti-racism and drawing on fieldwork conducted in relevant Spanish locations, I focus on their main assumptions and theoretical/political implications. Despite the heterogeneity of such initiatives, the fieldwork analysis points to common flaws; particularly in the ways their “positive” narratives and allegedly inclusive approaches might foster narrow definitions of racism, silencing its institutional/structural/governmental dimensions and potentially normalizing racist power relations.
Funder
H2020 European Research Council
Subject
Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Cultural Studies
Reference56 articles.
1. A phenomenology of whiteness
2. The Interference of al-Andalus
3. Us and Them?
4. Antirumores Getxo (2015) Guía práctica para combatir los rumores y prejuicios sobre la diversidad cultural. Zurrumurrurik antirumores. Getxo, Spain. Ayuntamiento de Getxo. Available at: https://www.getxo.eus/DocsPublic/inmigracion/SENSIBILIZACION/ANTIRUMORES/2015_GUIA_PRACTICA_COMBATIR_RUMORES_Y_PREJUCIOS.pdf (accessed 6 April 2020).