Abstract

In this paper we examine the educational experiences of Asian Australian women enrolled in a Faculty of Education in an urban university. We argue that the everyday social relations of pre‐service teacher education are constituted by discourses of liberal tolerance which call for a celebration of difference and diversity. This celebratory discourse suppresses, and thereby denies, the unequal power relations between the Anglo‐Celtic majority and ethnic, racialised minority groups. Discourses of liberal tolerance position the Anglo‐Celtic majority to be either tolerant or intolerant of its ethnicised and racialised Other(s). However, social interactions cannot be simply analysed in terms of a binary logic of tolerance or intolerance of the Other. Social interactions between members of majority and minority groups are complex; inherently contradictory and ambivalent. In this paper we explore these complex dynamics in the everyday experiences of Asian Australian women enrolled in a teacher‐education course

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