'They're not racist ...' prejudice denial, mitigation and suppression in dialogue.

Social scientific work on the suppression, mitigation or denial of prejudiced attitudes has tended to focus on the strategic self-presentation and self-monitoring undertaken by individual social actors on their own behalf. In this paper, we argue that existing perspectives might usefully be extended to incorporate three additional considerations. First, that social actors may, on some occasions, act to defend not only themselves, but also others from charges of prejudice. Second, that over the course of any social encounter, interactants may take joint responsibility for policing conversation and for correcting and suppressing the articulation of prejudiced talk. Third, that a focus on the dialogic character of conversation affords an appreciation of the ways in which the status of any particular utterance, action or event as 'racist' or 'prejudiced' may constitute a social accomplishment. Finally, we note the logical corollary of these observations - that in everyday life, the occurrence of 'racist discourse' is likely to represent a collaborative accomplishment, the responsibility for which is shared jointly between the person of the speaker and those other co-present individuals who occasion, reinforce or simply fail to suppress it.

[1]  S. Condor,et al.  Irrational categorization, natural intolerance and reasonable discrimination: lay representations of prejudice and racism. , 2006, The British journal of social psychology.

[2]  Carol T. Miller,et al.  Differences in Helping Whites and Blacks: A Meta-Analysis , 2005, Personality and social psychology review : an official journal of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc.

[3]  H. Arkes,et al.  AUTHORS' RESPONSE: The Implicit Prejudice Exchange: Islands of Consensus in a Sea of Controversy , 2004 .

[4]  L. Hausmann,et al.  Effects of External and Internal Motivation to Control Prejudice on Implicit Prejudice: The Mediating Role of Efforts to Control Prejudiced Responses , 2004 .

[5]  C. Crandall,et al.  A justification-suppression model of the expression and experience of prejudice. , 2003, Psychological bulletin.

[6]  S. Speer Sexist talk: Gender categories, participants’ orientations and irony , 2002 .

[7]  A. Markman,et al.  How do indirect measures of evaluation work? Evaluating the inference of prejudice in the Implicit Association Test. , 2001, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[8]  K. Durrheim,et al.  The Denial of Racism , 2001 .

[9]  Michael Billig,et al.  Humour and Hatred: The Racist Jokes of the Ku Klux Klan , 2001 .

[10]  J. Cotterill Domestic Discord, Rocky Relationships: Semantic Prosodies in Representations of Marital Violence in the O.J. Simpson Trial , 2001 .

[11]  M. Rapley,et al.  'This very difficult debate about Wik': stake, voice and the management of category memberships in race politics. , 2001, The British journal of social psychology.

[12]  J. Potter,et al.  The Management of Heterosexist Talk: Conversational Resources and Prejudiced Claims , 2000 .

[13]  G. Moskowitz,et al.  Preconsciously Controlling Stereotyping: Implicitly Activated Egalitarian Goals Prevent the Activation of Stereotypes , 2000 .

[14]  S. Condor,et al.  Pride and Prejudice: Identity Management in English People's Talk about `this Country' , 2000 .

[15]  P. Niedenthal,et al.  Implicit and Explicit Components of Prejudice , 2000 .

[16]  T. Forman,et al.  “I Am Not a Racist But...”: Mapping White College Students' Racial Ideology in the USA , 2000 .

[17]  Nina Eliasoph “Everyday Racism” in a Culture of Political Avoidance: Civil Society, Speech, and Taboo , 1999 .

[18]  T. V. Dijk,et al.  Discourse and Racism , 1999 .

[19]  Mark Rapley,et al.  ‘Just an ordinary Australian’: Self-categorization and the discursive construction of facticity in ‘new racist’ political rhetoric , 1998 .

[20]  Jeffrey W. Sherman,et al.  Suppression as a Stereotype Control Strategy , 1998, Personality and social psychology review : an official journal of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc.

[21]  C. Judd,et al.  Evidence for racial prejudice at the implicit level and its relationship with questionnaire measures. , 1997, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[22]  C. Antaki,et al.  Social identities in talk: speakers' own orientations. , 1996 .

[23]  H. Tajfel,et al.  Social Groups and Identities: Developing the Legacy of Henri Tajfel , 1996 .

[24]  R. Fazio,et al.  Variability in automatic activation as an unobtrusive measure of racial attitudes: a bona fide pipeline? , 1995, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[25]  M. Verkuyten,et al.  Racial Discourse, Attitude, and Rhetorical Manoeuvres , 1994 .

[26]  R. Dyer Yukinori Yanagi: Union Jack Ant Farm , 1994 .

[27]  I. Walker,et al.  Automatic and controlled activation of stereotypes: Individual differences associated with prejudice , 1994 .

[28]  C. Goodwin,et al.  Rethinking Context: Language as an Interactive Phenomenon , 1992 .

[29]  A. Elliot,et al.  Prejudice with and without compunction , 1991 .

[30]  Michael Billig,et al.  Ideological Dilemmas: A Social Psychology of Everyday Thinking , 1988 .

[31]  G. Button,et al.  Talk and Social Organisation , 1988 .

[32]  M. Billig The notion of ‘prejudice’: Some rhetorical and ideological aspects , 1988 .

[33]  T. V. Dijk,et al.  Communicating Racism: Ethnic Prejudice in Thought and Talk , 1987 .

[34]  Anita M. Pomerantz Extreme case formulations: A way of legitimizing claims , 1986, Asking and Telling in Conversation.

[35]  J. B. Mcconahay,et al.  Has Racism Declined in America? , 1981 .

[36]  D. O. Sears,et al.  Prejudice and Politics: Symbolic Racism Versus Racial Threats to the Good Life , 1981 .

[37]  F. Crosby,et al.  Recent unobtrusive studies of Black and White discrimination and prejudice: A literature review. , 1980 .

[38]  Erving Goffman,et al.  Frame Analysis: An Essay on the Organization of Experience. , 1979 .

[39]  R. Bootzin,et al.  Race and Sex as Stimuli for Negative Affect and Physical Avoidance , 1976 .

[40]  E. Donnerstein,et al.  Variables in interracial aggression: potential ingroup censure. , 1973, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[41]  Harold Sigall,et al.  Current Stereotypes: A Little Fading, a Little Faking. , 1971 .

[42]  Donald T. Campbell,et al.  Seating aggregation as an index of attitude. , 1966 .

[43]  Westie Fr,et al.  Autonomic responses and their relationship to race attitudes. , 1959, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[44]  Joseph B. Cooper,et al.  The Galvanic Skin Response as a Measure of Emotion in Prejudice , 1956 .

[45]  E. Goffman On face-work; an analysis of ritual elements in social interaction. , 1955, Psychiatry.

[46]  D T CAMPBELL,et al.  Galvanic skin response to Negro and white experimenters. , 1955, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[47]  T. Adorno The Authoritarian Personality , 1950 .

[48]  H. Proshansky A projective method for the study of attitudes. , 1943 .

[49]  S. Gathercole,et al.  Copyright © The British Psychological Society Unauthorised use and reproduction in any form (including the internet and other electronic means) is prohibited without prior permission from the Society. , 2005 .

[50]  S. Condor “The least doubtful promise for the future”? The short history of Tajfel’s “sociopsychological” approach to laboratory experimentation. , 2003 .

[51]  Margaret Wetherell,et al.  Analysing race talk; multidisciplinary approaches to the interview , 2003 .

[52]  E. Figgou Social psychological and lay understandings of prejudice, racism and discrimination : an exploration of their dilemmatic aspects. , 2002 .

[53]  M. Augoustinos,et al.  The language of prejudice and racism , 2001 .

[54]  M. Rapley ‘How to do X without Doing Y’: Accomplishing Discrimination without ‘Being Racist’ – ‘Doing Equity’ , 2001 .

[55]  A. Maass,et al.  Measuring prejudice: Implicit vs. explicit techniques. London: Sage Publications (pp. 96-116) , 2000 .

[56]  A. Maass,et al.  Measuring prejudice: Implicit versus explicit techniques. , 2000 .

[57]  C. Macrae,et al.  The self-regulation of intergroup perception: Mechanisms and consequences of stereotype suppression , 1996 .

[58]  Peter Lunt,et al.  Talk on Television: Audience Participation and Public Debate , 1993 .

[59]  Russell H. Fazio,et al.  New technologies for the direct and indirect assessment of attitudes. , 1992 .

[60]  Margaret Wetherell,et al.  Mapping The Language Of Racism , 1992 .

[61]  T. V. Dijk Discourse and the Denial of Racism , 1992 .

[62]  P. Devine Stereotypes and prejudice: Their automatic and controlled components. , 1989 .

[63]  P. Brown,et al.  Politeness: some universals in language usage , 1987 .

[64]  John C. Turner,et al.  Rediscovering the Social Group , 1987 .

[65]  J. Dovidio,et al.  The aversive form of racism. , 1986 .

[66]  L. Wispé,et al.  Race, sex, and sympathetic helping behavior: The broken bag caper. , 1971 .

[67]  E. Goffman Interaction Ritual: Essays on Face-To-Face Behavior , 1967 .

[68]  E. Goffman The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life , 1959 .