Negotiating white racial identity in multicultural courses: A model
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Lexington Books/Rowman & Littlefield
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Positing that white racial consciousness may be expected to develop chronologically through a series of distinct stages, much of the discussion surrounding stage-wide theories of white racial identity initially took place in the field of counseling, where the impetus for describing how whites construct a racial identity arose out of a concern to assist white therapists in recognizing their own racial biases, and to prevent them from viewing people of color monolithically (Hardiman, 2001; Pack-Brown, 1999; Reynolds and Baluch, 2001). Use of the models has now spread to other disciplines. Recently, however, they have come under criticism from various quarters (eg, Behrens, 1997; Fisher and Moradi, 2001; Rowe, Bennett, and Atkinson, 1994), to the extent that it seems advisable to reconsider their usefulness for understanding white student performance of identity in multicultural courses
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Miller, A. N., & Fellows, K. L. (2007). Negotiating white racial identity in multicultural courses: A model. In L. M. Cooks & J. S. Simpson (Eds.), Whiteness, pedagogy, performance: Dis/placing race (pp. 49–66). Lexington Books/Rowman & Littlefield.
