White Space

Race, Privilege, and Cultural Economies of the Okanagan Valley

Edited by Daniel J. Keyes & Luis L.M. Aguiar
Categories: Social Sciences, Race & Ethnicity, Business, Economics & Industry, Economics, Regional & Cultural Studies, Canadian Studies, History
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774860048, 284 pages, December 2021
Paperback : 9780774860055, 284 pages, August 2022
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774860062, 284 pages, December 2021
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774860079, 284 pages, December 2021

Table of contents

Introduction

Part 1: Historical Erasures and Re-inscriptions of White Fantasies

1 Emerging from the Whiteout: Colonization, Assimilation, Historical Erasure, and Okanagan-Syilx Resistance and Transforming Praxis in the Okanagan Valley / Bill Cohen and Natalie A. Chambers

2 Niggertoe Mountain: Colouring Hinterland Fantasies / Daniel Keyes

3 Nkwala: Colouring Hinterland Fantasies with the Indigenous / Daniel Keyes

4 The Rhetoric of Absence: Susan Allison’s Racial Melancholia / Janet MacArthur

5 Camp Road / Audrey Kobayashi

Part 2: Revealing and Challenging Contemporary White Fantasies

6 Mapping White Consumer Culture: Kelowna’s Tourist Maps 1983–1999 / Jon Corbett and Donna M. Senese

7 Fantasies of Encore Whiteness in the Central Okanagan Valley / Luis L.M. Aguiar

8 White Supremacy, Surveillance, and Urban Aboriginal Women in the Kelowna, BC, Housing Market / Sheila Lewis and Lawrence D. Berg

9 "The Jamaicans are here and working": Race and Community Responses / Carl E. James

10 Okanagan in Print: Exalting Typographical Heimlich Fantasies of Entrepreneurial Whiteness / Daniel Keyes

11 Emplacing and Displacing Whiteness in Kelowna: Aporetic Urbanization and the Limits of Modern Politics / Delacey Tedesco

12 The Imaginary of Redneck Okanagan Whiteness: A Sketch / Stephen Svenson

Contributors; Index

Description

Much attention has been paid to the changing culture and construction of the Canadian metropolis, but how are the workings of whiteness manifested in rural-urban spaces? White Space analyzes the dominance of whiteness in the Okanagan Valley of British Columbia to expose how this racial notion continues to sustain forms of settler privilege. Contributors to this perceptive collection move beyond appraising whiteness as if it were a solid and unshakable category. Instead they powerfully demonstrate how the concept can be re-envisioned, resisted, and reshaped in a context of neoliberal economic change.