*RACE, *IDENTITY politics, *SOLIDARITY, *GENDER identity, *ELECTRONIC books, *WORKING class white people, *WOMEN'S suffrage
Abstract
Defining such attempts to segregate Black workers and citizens as whiteness riots, Charnley and Richmond powerfully demonstrate how racist street violence is neither extemporary nor irrational. In I Fractured i , Alex Charnley and Michael Richmond take up the daunting task of explaining it all for the layperson. In other words, by revisiting Black feminist analyses of class struggles and politics, Charnley and Richmond remind us all that identity politics are fundamentally about envisioning an identity of purpose that can sustain concrete practices of solidarity across multiple struggles against all forms of oppression; class I in primis i . [Extracted from the article]
*WAR, *IMPERIALISM, *SOUTH African War, 1899-1902, *INDIGENOUS Australians, *COLONIES, BRITISH colonies
Abstract
It is through the globalised phenomenon of the military campaign that Hutchinson locates the ways in which imperialism fermented local settler colonial identity. Settlers, War and Empire in the Press: Unsettling News in Australia and Britain, 1869-1902: By Sam Hutchinson. Citing over eighty newspapers and magazines across Australia, New Zealand and Britain, Hutchinson has drawn together a deeply researched and broadly sourced study of the settler colonial and metropolitan press. [Extracted from the article]