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      Beyond the Psychological Wage: Du Bois on White Dominion

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      Political Theory
      SAGE Publications

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          Abstract

          W.E.B. Du Bois’s reading of whiteness as a “public and psychological wage” is enormously influential. This essay examines another, lesser known facet of Du Bois’s account of racialized identity: his conceptualization of whiteness as dominion. In his 1920–1940 writings, “modern” whiteness appears as a proprietary orientation toward the planet in general and toward “darker peoples” in particular. This “title to the universe” is part of chattel slavery’s uneven afterlife, in which the historical fact of “propertized human life” endures as a racialized ethos of ownership. The essay examines how this “title” is expressed and reinforced in the twentieth century by the Jim Crow system of racial signs in the United States and by violent “colonial aggrandizement” worldwide. The analytic of white dominion, I argue, allows Du Bois to productively link phenomena often regarded as discrete, namely, domestic and global forms of white supremacy and practices of exploitation and dispossession. Ultimately, the entitlement Du Bois associates with whiteness is best understood as a pervasive, taken-for-granted horizon of perception, which facilitates the transaction of the “wage” but is not reducible to it.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Political Theory
          Political Theory
          SAGE Publications
          0090-5917
          1552-7476
          February 2019
          August 17 2018
          February 2019
          : 47
          : 1
          : 6-31
          Affiliations
          [1 ]University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA
          Article
          10.1177/0090591718791744
          248e72f3-4237-415a-b3b1-df0275dab6d2
          © 2019

          http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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