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Routings: "Race," African Diasporas, and Swedish Belonging
Author(s) -
Sawyer Lena
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
transforming anthropology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.325
H-Index - 9
eISSN - 1548-7466
pISSN - 1051-0559
DOI - 10.1525/tran.2002.11.1.13
Subject(s) - racism , negotiation , sociology , narrative , gender studies , power (physics) , race (biology) , variety (cybernetics) , homogeneous , relevance (law) , face (sociological concept) , ethnic group , anthropology , political science , law , social science , linguistics , philosophy , physics , quantum mechanics , artificial intelligence , computer science , thermodynamics
This paper discusses the fissures and disjunctions in calls for African diasporic community in Stockholm, Sweden and shows how the "local" (which in this case is formulated as national) is tinged with a particular Swedish moral discourse in relationship to racism. A disjuncture expresses itself in stories of the national past and people. This is a past described as homogeneous and which strategically "routes" racism to specific transnational spaces and time periods that are outside of the Swedish community. Following the work of anthropologist Jacqueline Nassy Brown (1998,2000), I suggest that such "routings" push us to consider the specific manners in which "the global" is used to negotiate "local" power relations. The relevance of "routings" emerges in two manners in this paper: in how informants' narratives of the Swedish past are used strategically to comment upon and debate the historically tabooed topic of racism in Sweden, and in how a variety of African diasporic meanings get created and negotiated by Swedes of African ancestry when they discuss belonging and racism.