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@article{ Louis2005,
 title = {The difference sameness makes},
 author = {Louis, Brett},
 journal = {Ethnicities},
 number = {3},
 pages = {343-364},
 volume = {5},
 year = {2005},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.1177/1468796805054960},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-230197},
 abstract = {This article examines the form and effects of differentiation that surface                within the artifice of racial sameness. Using contemporary debates between                ‘native-born’ and ‘foreign-born’ blacks in                the USA over the right to ‘African American’ identity and the                socioeconomic threat posed to the former by the latter, I show how the operation of                the logic of race internally within a racial group reiterates familiar effects of                racialization. Drawing on Freud’s notion of the ‘narcissism of                minor differences’ as a framing device, I point out that this                difference/sameness relation is not simply antagonistic through an analysis of the                ambiguity of Africa as posing a socioeconomic threat in the migrants it sends while                also presenting the historical and symbolic basis for African American claims to                cultural distinctiveness. The article builds a critique of the invention of sameness                that makes difference in two key ways: first, through the representation of                difference as an antithesis that affirms the racialized self characterized by                sameness; and second, that this makes a political difference in the sense that this                dialectic of black as self and other reifies the social problematic of its                sameness/difference relation as intrinsically (intra)racial to the extent that the                substantive socioeconomic causality of racial stratification and racism are obscured.},
}