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Author Itagaki, Lynn Mie, 1974- author.

Title Civil racism : the 1992 Los Angeles rebellion and the crisis of racial burnout / Lynn Mie Itagaki
Published Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, 2016

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Description 1 online resource
Contents The 1992 Los Angeles crisis -- Part I. Racial civility -- Model family values and sentimentalizing the crisis -- In/civility, with colorblindness and equal treatment for all -- The territorialization of civility, the spatialization of revenge -- Part II. Counterdiscourse of civility -- At the end of tragedy -- The media spectacle of racial disaster -- Epilogue: Lives that matter
Summary The 1992 Los Angeles rebellion, also known as the Rodney King riots, followed the acquittal of four police officers who had been charged with assault and the use of excessive force against a Black motorist. The violence included widespread looting and destruction of stores, many of which were owned or operated by Korean Americans in neighborhoods that were predominantly Black and Latina/o. Civil Racism examines a range of cultural reactions to the?riots? anchored by calls for a racist civility, a central component of the aesthetics and politics of the post?civil rights era. Lynn Mie Itagaki argues that the rebellion interrupted the rhetoric of?civil racism,? which she defines as the preservation of civility at the expense of racial equality. As an expression of structural racism, Itagaki writes, civil racism exhibits the active-- though often unintentional-- perpetuation of discrimination through one's everyday engagement with the state and society. She is particularly interested in how civility manifests in societal institutions such as the family, the school, and the neighborhood, and she investigates dramatic, filmic, and literary texts by African American, Asian American, and Latina/o artists and writers that contest these demands for a racist civility. Itagaki specifically addresses what she sees as two?blind spots? in society and in scholarship. One is the invisibility of Asians and Latinas/os in media coverage and popular culture that, she posits, importantly shapes Black-White racial formations that dominate mainstream discourse about race. The second is the scholarly separation of two critical traditions that should be joined in analyses of racial injustice and the 1992 Los Angeles rebellion: comparative race studies and feminist theories. Civil Racism insists that the 1992?riots? continue to matter, that the artistic responses matter, and that-- more than twenty years later-- debates about issues of race, ethnicity, class, and gender are more urgent than ever
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Title from PDF file title page (viewed November 17, 2016)
Subject Riots -- California -- Los Angeles -- History -- 20th century
Protest movements -- California -- Los Angeles -- History -- 20th century
African Americans -- California -- Los Angeles -- Social conditions -- 20th century
Minorities -- California -- Los Angeles -- Social conditions -- 20th century
Racism -- California -- Los Angeles -- History -- 20th century
Civil society -- California -- Los Angeles -- History -- 20th century
Courtesy -- Social aspects -- California -- Los Angeles -- History -- 20th century
Burn out (Psychology) -- Social aspects -- California -- Los Angeles -- History -- 20th century
Racism -- history
Riots -- history
Black or African American -- history
Social Discrimination -- history
African Americans -- Social conditions
Civil society
Minorities -- Social conditions
Protest movements
Race relations
Racism
Riots
SUBJECT Los Angeles (Calif.) -- Race relations -- History -- 20th century
Subject California -- Los Angeles
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781452950167
1452950164