The phenomenology of same-race prejudice

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Authors

Makena, Paul Tshwarelo

Issue Date

2018-01

Type

Thesis

Language

en

Keywords

Authenticity , Black , Blackness , Categorisation , Critical race theory , Essentialism , Intolerance , Naturalism , Naturalist attitude , Normativity , Phenomenology , Prejudice , Prototypicality , Race , Racial identity , Racial identification , Stereotypes , White , Whiteness

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Abstract

This thesis is not structured as a conventional empirical study (theoretical background, method, results, discussion), but instead consists of an iterative series of attempts at making sense of same-race prejudice – hopefully systematically homing in on a richer and more acute understanding of the phenomenon. The chapters are grouped together in pairs or triplets – each grouping addressing different but related perspectives on the problem. Chapters 1 and 2 are contextual, setting the scene historically and conceptually. Chapters 3, 4 and 5 introduce three different perspectives on using phenomenology as a means of approaching the issue of same-race prejudice. Chapters 6 and 7 are dedicated to looking at the themes of same-race prejudice, a critical interrogation of the themes from the interview discussions, the literature and how same-race prejudice is experienced, played out and sustained. Chapter 8 links back to Chapter 1 by casting another look at sensitivity and responsiveness to same-race prejudice by organisations whose work is supposedly on prejudice eradication. The chapter further links with both Chapters 3 and 4 by calling upon a phenomenological understanding to humanity as what can bring a liveable change to humanity regarding same-race prejudice. Chapter 9 serves as a summary of all the chapters, what each individually and collectively hoped to achieve, and the general findings and statements about same-race prejudice from the chapters’ theoretical discussions, research interviews, and critical interrogation of both the mundane and theoretical understanding.

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Makena, Paul Tshwarelo (2018) The phenomenology of same-race prejudice, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/24944>

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