Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

White Racial and Ethnic Identity in the United States

357

Citations

89

References

2005

Year

TLDR

White racial identity has long been treated as a default, privileged category, but recent scholarship increasingly views it as a complex, situated construct distinct from white ethnic identity. The review seeks to deepen understanding of white racial identity by critically evaluating recent whiteness studies and urging empirical research that moves beyond treating whiteness as a monolithic, privileged identity. The authors conduct a systematic review of literature on white racial and ethnic identity, focusing on developments in whiteness studies over the past decade.

Abstract

This review examines research on white racial and ethnic identity, paying special attention to developments in whiteness studies during the past decade. Although sociologists have long focused on white ethnic identity, considerations of white racial identity are more recent. White racial identity is commonly portrayed as a default racial category, an invisible yet privileged identity formed by centuries of oppression of nonwhite groups. Whiteness has become synonymous with privilege in much scholarly writing, although recent empirical work strives to consider white racial identity as a complex, situated identity rather than a monolithic one. The study of white racial identity can greatly benefit from moving away from simply naming whiteness as an overlooked, privileged identity and by paying closer attention to empirical studies of racial and ethnic identity by those studying social movements, ethnic identity, and social psychology.

References

YearCitations

Page 1