Although the formal racialization of dogs ended with the dawn of political decolonization in the early 1960s, dogs continued to be co-opted for postcolonial racial discourse. Dogs were in a prominent position in postcolonial society due to their prevalence in the security arrangements of white homes as well as in the security forces of white supremacist Rhodesia and apartheid South Africa. The intensity of the relationship between white minorities, their canine pets and the surrounding African population points toward the uncomfortable conclusion that in the heightened racial environments of decolonizing settler Africa, dogs could be made to be racist. (Doble, 2020)
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- Doble, J. (2020). Can Dogs be Racist? The Colonial Legacies of Racialized Dogs in Keny and Zambia. History Workshop Journal, 89, 68-89.
- photograph by Elliott Erwitt (Magnum) via
- photograph by Elliott Erwitt (Magnum) via
Great find!! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteMany thanks, Kenneth, love this kind of thoughts.
DeleteErwitt, again! 📷
ReplyDeleteOne of my favourite photographs.
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