A normative response that often seems to circulate within our discipline when referring to brown critical feminist scholars is: "She is difficult." The "She is difficult" trope works to signal the potential trouble a department might be inviting when it hires a brown critical feminist scholar. The trope works as heuristic universal, as a signifier to mark the body of the "unruly brown woman." It does so by circulating norms of civility constituted in White privilege. Communicative processes and forms that thus challenge this white privilege fall outside of the norm, as the abnormal. Incivility, as a tool of the oppressor, works fundamentally to shut out interrogation of the Whiteness of the structures we inhabit. Rather than interrogating the structures of White privilege that reproduce this privilege, norms of incivility often work unequally on the bodies of brown women. More so, these norms work on bodies of brown women who question the o
This blog offers Mohan Dutta's reflections on the theoretical framework of the culture-centered approach, examining the interplays among Structure, Culture, and Agency in shaping marginalisation and the ways in which communities at the margins challenge structures. Writings on the blog are continually being revised to reflect the organic analysis of structure and agency.