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British Racial Discourse: A Study of British Political Discourse About Race and Race-related Matters PDF

295 Pages·1984·2.991 MB·English
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Comparative ethnic and race relations British racial discourse Comparative ethnic and race relations series Published for the SSRC Research Unit on Ethnic Relations at the University of Aston in Birmingham Edited by Professor John Rex Director Dr Robin Ward Deputy Director Mr Malcolm Cross Deputy Director This series has been formed to publish works of original theory and empirical research on the problems of racially mixed societies. It is based on the work of the SSRC Research Unit for Ethnic Relations at Aston University -the main centre for the study of race relations in Britain. The first book in the series is a textbook on Racial and Ethnic Competition by Professor Michael Banton -a leading British sociologist of race relations and the former Director of the Unit. Future titles will be on such issues as the forms of contact between majority and minority groups, housing, the problems faced by young people, employment, ethnic identity and ethnicity, and will concentrate on race and employment, race and the inner city, and ethnicity and education. The books will appeal to an international readership of scholars, students and professionals concerned with racial issues, across a wide range of disciplines (such as sociology, anthropology, social policy, politics, economics, education and law), as well as among professional social administrators, teachers, government officials, health service workers and others. British racial discourse A study of British political discourse about race and race-related matters FRANK REEVES CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS Cambridge LondonN ew York New Rochelle MelbournSey dney CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore, Silo Paulo, Delhi, Dubai, Tokyo Cambridge University Press The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 8RU, UK Published in the United States of America by Cambridge University Press, New York www.cambridge.org Information on this title: www.cambridge.org/978052ll24386 © Cambridge University Press 1983 This publication is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press. First published 1983 This digitally printed version 2009 A catalogue record for this publication is available from the British Library Library of Congress Catalogue Card Number: 83-7273 ISBN 978-0-521-25554-7 Hardback ISBN 978-0-521-12438-6 Paperback Cambridge University Press has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of URLs for external or third-party internet websites referred to in this publication, and does not guarantee that any content on such websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate. Contents List offi gures and tables page VI A ck no wledgments vii Objectivity viii Introduction The meaning of 'racism': its limitations when applied to the study of discourse dealing with race relations 7 2 The meaning of 'ideology' and its relationship to discourse 28 3 The economic foundations of racial division 45 4 The state, levels of political articulation, and the discourse of the Conservative and Labour Parties 61 5 British political values and race relations 93 6 The nature of discoursive deracialisation l 72 7 Deracialised justifications: a case study (an analysis of the parliamentary debates on immigration) 204 8 Conclusion: ideology and British race relations 240 Appendix I Nomenclature 255 Appendix 2 Ideological eristic 259 Appendix 3 Examples from colonial history of discoursive deracialisation 263 Appendix 4 Further examples of popular sanitary coding 265 Bibliography and references 268 Name index 279 Subject index 282 v Figures 1 Racial symbol and referent page 10 2 Observer's and actor's accounts of social structure 45 3 The square of alienation 48 4 The metropolitan/colonial square of alienation 49 5 Logical and non-logical levels 89 6 Ideological integration 90 7 The identification of ideological deracialisation 179 8 The identification of strategic deracialisation 181 Tables 1 Types of discourse 29 2 Differences between specialised political and general discourse 78-9 3 Party values 88 4 List of argument forms and rhetorical modes 21O 5 Percentage distribution of argument forms in the par- liamentary debates on immigration 239 VI Acknowledgments I am indebted, above all, to Professor John Rex, without whose help and constant encouragement this project would never have been undertaken, sustained or completed. Professor Rex acted not only as an academic patron, but went out of his way to help me solve the practical and financial problems arising from prolonged research of this kind. I am also grateful to colleagues at the Research Unit on Ethnic Relations, University of Aston, for providing a stimulating and critical academic environment. The emotional, intellectual, and domestic support I received from my wife, Melhado Chevannes, was indispensable. While I was attempting to write detachedly about white racial discourse, she frequently found herself on the receiving end of its most pernicious manifestations. The contri­ butions of my baby daughters, Toussaint and Spartaca need also to be acknowledged, but I am uncertain as to whether the interludes they forced on me have added or subtracted from the book. Should I have unduly neglected their constant wish to play, I beg their forgiveness. I should like especially to acknowledge the help of my old friend, Sydney Peiris. I have spent many enjoyable hours with him discussing race and politics. He also bears some responsibility for locating the more obscure and esoteric references used in the text. Among the many people who, in a variety of ways, supported my precious project, I should like to mention Ron Cook, the late Frank Noble, and Charles Critcher of the Open University West Midland Regional Office, Jenny Williams, Ivan Henry, Mark Johnson, Trevor and Jackie Coote, Ken and Brenda Purchase, Keith and Peta Wymer, and David and Joan Grabh am. Finally, I should specially like to thank (another) Jenny Williams, Marci Green, Margaret Reeves (my sister), Christine Dunn, Annabel de Meza Arslan and Gwen Morris who, at various stages, contributed to the typing of the manuscript. vii Objectivity A neighbour came to Nasrudin for an interpretation on a point of law. 'My cow was gored by your bull. Do I get any compensation?' 'Certainly not. How can a man be held responsible for what an animal does?' 'Just a moment', said the crafty villager. 'I am afraid I got the question back to front. What actually happened was that my bull gored your cow.' 'Ah', said the Mulla, 'this is more involved. I shall have to look up the book of precedents, for there may be other factors involved which are relevant and which could alter the case.' !dries Shah, The Pleasantries of the Incredible Mu/la Nasrudin, Picador. viii Introduction The overall aim of this book is to provide some explanation for the kinds of discourse used in dealing with racial issues. The central task throughout is to combine the insights offered by a theory of ideology with an analysis of examples of actual discourse about race and related matters. Because of the immensity of the task of trying to account for all kinds of racial expression, the study is confined, in the main, to an examination of political discourse, and further, to the political discourse of a limited number of national politicians belonging either to the Conservative or to the Labour Party. There are a number of reasons for selecting political discourse about race and race-related issues as a subject for study. Such discourse is related to decision-making or to the absence of decision-making, which gives it a little more significance than that of a casual conversation in a public bar. Also, it is the language of persons who are accustomed to making public pronouncements and are aware, to some degree, of the likely consequences of their utterances. And, because of the ideological setting in which it occurs, political discourse may reveal more consistency and regularity of feature than other kinds of speech. Force of circumstance probably encourages politicans to develop, enlarge upon, and systematise their views on various topics. There is also likely to be variation between different schools of political thought, enabling useful comparisons to be made. For reasons, then, of its association with significant decision-making, its regularity of feature, and the availability of comparative and contrasting data, political discourse was chosen as the focus for the project. The study is further limited to an examination of what Conservative and Labour politicians have to say about race - thus omitting the more sensational racial declarations of Right-wing groups such as the National Front. For similar reasons (though without implying, in the manner of psychologists such as Eysenck, that Right-and Left-wing attitudes should be classified in tandem), the strong anti-racist stances of communist and Trotskyist groups are neglected. This does not mean that the menace posed to the black community* by the National Front's vicious, Right-wing *For a discussion of the terminology used in this study to refer to racial minorities, see Appendix I. 2 Introduction propaganda and other action is unrecognised. Rather, the central purpose of the study is to concentrate on the mainstream of British politics in the shape of the Conservative and Labour Parties, which must be held responsible, inasmuch as responsibility can be attributed in this sphere, for making (by inclusion or omission) most of the political decisions that have affected race relations and racial minority groups. This state of affairs is likely to continue to be the case for the foreseeable future. And yet, while there is much literature on fascist ideology, including a recently published Fascists: A Social Psychological View of the National Front (Billig, 1978) surprisingly little has been written by social scientists generally, and sociologists in particular, about British Conservative or Labour Party ideology, and even less about those ideologies in relation to racial matters. One common view is that party political consensus has removed race as an electoral issue, yet within their parties and to their electorate politicians are forced to justify their action or inaction to pressure groups and individuals that challenge them. The aim of the study is to examine the regular features of the justificatory systems adopted by mainstream politicians. Such a study has political relevance: it should provide insights into the relationship between racial and other party values, into the stability of the ideological structure as a whole, and into whether there is much potential or room for further policy initiative in the field of race relations within the present political context. Despite the decision to limit the study to an examination of political discourse, the task was still sufficiently grandiose to require further focus. This was accomplished by the choice of theory and by the selection of particular cases for analysis. The explanatory theory adopted was drawn extensively from current sociological studies of ideology with a heavy emphasis on the tradition developed from Marx and Engels's Feuerbach: Opposition of the Material­ ist and Idealist Outlooks (1973). In particular, there is an attempt to relate racial discourse to the general process of capitalist state legitimation described by Habermas (1976). But ideas are also drawn eclectically from the works of Pareto, Gramsci, and Shils, to provide a theory of ideological levels in which the specialist discourse of politicians can be distinguished from the discourse of the general population. It is recognised that the discourse of politicians has an important justificatory function which, in the examination of empirical data, best serves to exemplify its ideological nature. A series of logical and philosophical distinctions is also employed. The sentences that go to make up an ideological complex are classed as descriptive, evaluative, or prescriptive, while the process of explanation is carefully distinguished from justification. Many arguments in the area of

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