Critical Race and Whiteness Studies
www.acrawsa.org.au/ejournal
Volume 10, Number 2, 2014
ISSN 1838-8310 © Australian Critical Race and Whiteness Studies Association 2014
10
th
ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL ISSUE OF CRITICAL RACE AND WHITENESS STUDIES
Beyond White Virtue: Reflections on the First Decade of
Critical Race and Whiteness Studies in the Australian
Academy
Fiona Nicoll
University of Queensland
This article undertakes two related tasks. Firstly, it provides one account of the
origins of the Australian Critical Race and Whiteness Studies Association
(ACRAWSA) in 2003 and considers some of its significant events, publications
and relationships. Secondly, it reflects on the survival of critical race and
whiteness studies (CRWS) in the cultural space of the neo-liberal university. The
arguments of three critical race and whiteness studies scholars are used to
support me on this journey. To understand the challenges of thinking, speaking
and writing critically about matters of race and whiteness, I draw on David Theo
Goldberg’s distinction between anti-racism and anti-racialism in The Threat of
Race (2009). I draw on Sara Ahmed’s study On Being Included (2012) to explain
an increasing disarticulation between an anti-racist politics centred on equality—
on the one hand—and ‘diversity’ talk and practice—on the other. The last part of
the talk turns to the matter of Indigenous sovereignty, drawing on a key concept
from the work of ACRAWSA’s founding president, Aileen Moreton-Robinson. I
argue that ACRAWSA’s focus on everyday manifestations of the “possessive
investment in patriarchal white sovereignty” (2011) have provided intellectual
and ethical resilience in the face of the neo-liberal university’s radically
individualising trajectory. I conclude with a call to scholars working within CRWS
to resist the gendered temptation of white virtue as we enter the Association’s
second decade.
Keywords: race, whiteness, virtue, everyday life, academia
Timelines and Milestones
In 2013 I was invited to speak at the Australian Critical Race and Whiteness
Studies Association (ACRAWSA) conference as the first Vice President and