The books in Mapping Racisms, edited by Jo
Carrillo, Darrell Y. Hamamoto, Rodolfo D. Torres, and E. Frances
White, assess the changing nature and meaning of racialized social
relations in the United States. Although many of the works in the
series are expected to be cultural, socio-economic, and historical
studies devoted to a single ethnic group, the editors are especially
interested in manuscripts that explore comparisons among these groups
and analyze contemporary expressions of racialized relations and
identities in the context of demographic shifts, changing class
formations, and new forms of global dislocation. The aim of the
series is to publish books that are analytical and rigorous, but
at the same time appealing to a general audience. |