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Desire for Development

Whiteness, Gender, and the Helping Imperative

By Barbara Heron
Subjects Social Science, Women’s Studies, Development Studies, Political Science, African Politics, Sociology
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Paperback : 9781554580019, 204 pages, December 2007
Ebook (EPUB) : 9781554580996, 204 pages, December 2007

Table of contents

Table of Contents for
Desire for Development: Whiteness, Gender, and the Helping Imperative by Barbara Heron

1. Introduction: “Challenging the Development Work(er) Narrative”

2. Where Do Development Workers Really Come From?

3. Development Is . .. A Relational Experience

4. Negotiating Subject Positions, Constituting Selves

5. Participants’ Retrospectives: Complicating Desire

6. Summing Up, Drawing Conclusions

Notes

Bibliography

Description

In Desire for Development: Whiteness, Gender, and the Helping Imperative, Barbara Heron draws on poststructuralist notions of subjectivity, critical race and space theory, feminism, colonial and postcolonial studies, and travel writing to trace colonial continuities in the post-development recollections of white Canadian women who have worked in Africa. Following the narrative arc of the development worker story from the decision to go overseas, through the experiences abroad, the return home, and final reflections, the book interweaves theory with the words of the participants to bring theory to life and to generate new understandings of whiteness and development work.

Heron reveals how the desire for development is about the making of self in terms that are highly raced, classed, and gendered, and she exposes the moral core of this self and its seemingly paradoxical necessity to the Other. The construction of white female subjectivity is thereby revealed as contingent on notions of goodness and Othering, played out against, and constituted by, the backdrop of the NorthSouth binary, in which Canada’s national narrative situates us as the “good guys” of the world.

Reviews

"Who has not thought about going to the Third World to help? Heron pushes our buttons when she argues that helping can be the oldest colonial move. Perceptive, stunning in its honesty, yet unwilling to dismiss helping altogether, this book helps us to thread our way through the moral complexities of the First World position of colonizers who now set out to improve the very societies they continue to exploit. This resolutely anti-colonial study of whiteness and gender is crucial for thinking critically about development. "

- Sherene Razack, author of Dark Threats and White Knights: The Somalia Affair, Peacekeeping, and the New Imperialism (2004)