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whitelash

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also: white-lash and white lash

English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Blend of white +‎ backlash.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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whitelash (plural whitelashes)

  1. A backlash by white people against other ethnicities. [from 1970]
    Coordinate term: blacklash
    • 1970 January, John H. Britton, “Into age of sick seventies”, in Jet magazine, page 7:
      This was the blacklash. The whitelash came, too, and blood flowed in the streets.
    • 1996, “'The Lash', 1977”, in Classroom Activities on Wisconsin Indian Treaties and Tribal Sovereignty, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction, →ISBN, page 266:
      There are four ‘whitelash’ bills currently before Congress, designed to seriously undermine Native American rights [and] sovereignty, and treaty land.
    • 2000, David Myles Jones, A "new Breed" of Black Consciousness: Re-reading Gender, Ideology, and Generational Change in Neo-black Literature and Criticism, 1965-1975, Volume 2, University of Minnesota, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 406:
      for more on 'whitelash' reactions to militant black writing.
    • 2001, Fiona Mackay, Love and Politics: Women Politicians and the Ethics of Care, Continuum, →ISBN, page 75; n. 3.:
      There has been a particularly acute white backlash or 'whitelash' in the United States against affirmative action programmes which promote women and black men.
    • 2010, William Hairston, Suburban-Ghetto: A Novel, →ISBN, page 56:
      See how the white-lash gave Blacks and Latinos the blues! No way to claim investment profits shareholders lose!
    • 2016, Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, “Building a Multiracial Movement in the Trump Era”, in Anand Gopal, Naomi Klein, Jeremy Scahill, Owen Jones, Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, editors, The Anti-Inauguration: Building resistance in the Trump era, Haymarket Books, →ISBN:
      The best example of this is when CNN's Van Jones characterized Trump's election as revenge, or a 'whitelash,' against black voters, who overwhelmingly voted for Obama in 2008 and 2012.
    • 2017, George Yancy, On Race: 34 Conversations in a Time of Crisis, Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 7:
      My sense is that even Obama didn't see Trump coming; he didn't see the full extent of the whitelash. And it is that whitelash, the likes of which we have yet to see fully, that drives home the fierce urgency of now.
    • 2018, Miguel A. De La Torre, “Chapter 11: Deporter-in-Chief: Why Reject Christian Hospitality?”, in Juan M. Floyd-Thomas, Anthony B. Pinn, editors, Religion in the Age of Obama, Bloomsbury Academic, →ISBN:
      And while many accomplishments exist for celebrating during the Obama years, specifically in the midst of a Trump whitelash, Obama's immigration policies have been devastating to migrants south of the border

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