Abstract:
The papers presented in this collection emerged from a conference on
'Historicising Whiteness' held at the University of Melbourne in November 2006. This
gathering was inspired by a realisation that, while studies of whiteness have proliferated
across numerous disciplines, there had not to date been a major scholarly meeting
specifically devoted to a broad examination of the intersections between whiteness and
history. The conference drew together a broad range of scholars interested in teasing out
the promise, or otherwise, of this field for historians. Traversing a wide variety of theoretical
concepts, countries, periods and methodologies, it explicitly set out to move beyond the
North American focus which has been a feature of scholarship in this area. Thus this
collection brings together historians from Australia, New Zealand, North America, South
Africa, Europe and Asia to focus on the development of the concept of whiteness through
time, tracing the emergence and disappearance of this figuration of identity and power
through both the modern and non-modern periods, and its growth into the powerful,
international concept that now has currency across the world.