Abstract
ABSTRACTOn the morning of Friday 3 February 2017, Femi Nylander â a Black Oxford alumnus â walked through the grounds of Oxford Universityâs Harris Manchester College. Later that morning a CCTV image of Femi was circulated to staff and students who were urged to âmaintain vigilanceâ.Whilst âpost-racialâ ideology insists on framing such incidents as isolated aberrations bereft of wider structural and institutional context, in this article I draw upon the theoretical concepts of racial microaggressions and bodies out of place in order to disrupt this hegemonic interpretation.Adopting the Critical Race Theory (CRT) method of counter-narrative, I centralise the voices of student campaigns as sites of legitimate experiential knowledge. These campaigns reveal a web of whiteness that undergirds Higher Education. It is this web, I argue, that ensnares Femi on the day in question. Thus, Femiâs experience cannot be understood in abstraction from structural white supremacy and institutionalised whiteness.
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