neo-racist
See also: neoracist
English
Adjective
neo-racist (comparative more neo-racist, superlative most neo-racist)
- Alternative form of neoracist
- 1975, Nathan Glazer, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, & Corinne Saposs Schelling, Ethnicity: Theory and Experience, →ISBN, page 266:
- Ideologically, the Nixon administration was neo-racist insofar as it manipulated negative symbols associated with white perceptions of blacks.
- 2013, Romin W. Tafarodi, Subjectivity in the Twenty-First Century, →ISBN:
- They contend that the latter's opening up of the category of Settler to include all non-Indigenous peoples has arisen alongside, and is thus tainted by association with, neo-racist and neoliberal ideologies of the 1980s that rely for their force on the assumption of 'incommensurable "differences" between "cultures" imagined as separate and distince' (p. 122).
- 2016, Aurélien Mondon, The Mainstreaming of the Extreme Right in France and Australia, →ISBN:
- Therefore, the neo-racist argument targets not only immigrants but also their descendants for the threat they pose to national identity.
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Noun
neo-racist (plural neo-racists)
- Alternative form of neoracist
- 2006, Grace-Edward Galabuzi, Canada's Economic Apartheid, →ISBN:
- Neo-racists have been documented to engage xenophobic responses and attempts at closure. At the national level, they often demand an end to immigration.
- 2011, Jeff Greenfield, Then Everything Changed, →ISBN:
- The Republicans lost three Senate seats, and sixteen seats in the House, including such familiar figures as North Carolina's Jesse Helms, voted out when just enough white working-class voters turned to the populist message of State Insurance Commissioner John Ingram, who attacked Helms not as a neo-racist or an extremist, but as "the hand-picked tool of the fat cats and special interests."
- 2016, Manuela Boatcă, Global Inequalities Beyond Occidentalism, →ISBN:
- That Weber's sociology should be so clearly indebted to narrowly defined and historically contingent cultural and political values underlying his notion of national identity has been alternatively seen as a reason for either discarding Weber as a classic (Abraham 1991) or re-reading him as a neo-racist (Zimmerman 2006).
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