Ahmed, R. Z. (2001, July 9). Bradford burns in mainland Britain’s worst riots. Global News Wire (n.p.).
2.
Aidi, H. (2002). Racial profiling and police brutality in Britain. Retrieved December 5, 2002, from www.africana.com/DailyArticles/index_20000303.htm
3.
Alibhai-Brown, Y. (2002, July 21). In the English arts, a merry racial blend. The New York Times. p. S2-1.
4.
Andrews, D. L. (2001). The fact(s) of Michael Jordan’s Blackness: Excavating a floating racial signifier. In D. L. Andrews (Ed.), Michael Jordan, Inc.: Corporate sport, media culture, and late-modern America (pp. 107-153). Albany: State University of New York Press .
5.
Berlant, L. (1993). National brands/national bodies: Imitation of life. In B. Robbins (Ed.), The phantom public sphere (pp. 173-209). Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press .
6.
“The book that has set London alight.” (2001, February 5). The Evening Standard (London), pp. 24-25.
7.
Butler, J. (1990). Gender trouble: Feminism and the subversion of identity. New York: Routledge .
8.
Butler, J. (1993).Bodies that matter: On the discursive limits of “sex.” New York: Routledge .
9.
Caglar, A. S. (1997). Hyphenated identities and the limits of “culture.” In T. Modood & P. Werbner (Eds.), The politics of multiculturalism in the new Europe: Racism, identity and community (pp. 169-186). London: Zed Books .
10.
Carrington, B. (2001). Postmodern Blackness and the celebrity sports star: Ian Wright, “race,” and English identity. In D. L. Andrews & S. J. Jackson (Eds.), Sports stars: The cultural politics of sporting celebrity (pp. 102-124). London: Routledge .
11.
Chadha, G. (2002, April 11). Call that a melting pot? America is still congratulating itself on its multicultural movie industry. The Guardian, G2-G11.
12.
Denzin, N. K. (2002). Reading race: Hollywood and the cinema of racial violence. London: Sage .
13.
Edemariam, A. (2002, July 7). Seeing things in black and white: Monster’s Ball exposes Hollywood’s failure of nerves over interracial relationships. The Evening Standard, p. 37.
14.
Giardina. M. D., & Metz, J. L. (2001). Celebrating humanity: Olympic marketing and the homogenization of multiculturalism .” International Journal of Sports Marketing & Sponsorship, 3(2), 203-223 .
15.
Giroux, H. A. (1995). Innocence and pedagogy in Disney’s world. In E. Bell, L. Haas, & L. Sells (Eds.), From mouse to mermaid: The politics of film, gender, and culture (pp. 43-61). Bloomington: Indiana University Press .
16.
Hall, S. (1992). What is this “Black” in Black popular culture. In G. Dent (Ed.), Black popular culture (pp. 21-33). Seattle, WA: Bay Press .
17.
Hall, S. (1996). Introduction: Who needs identity? In S. Hall & P. DuGay (Eds.), Questions of cultural identity (pp. 1-17). London: Sage .
18.
Harris, P. (2001,July 8). Bradford under siege after day of race riots. The Observer, p. 1.
19.
Harris, P. (2002, June 30). Riot city reaches boiling point. The Guardian (London), p. 10.
20.
Hutnyk, J. (2000). Adorno at Womad: South Asian crossovers and the limits of hybridity-talk. In P. Werbner & T. Modood (Eds.), Debating cultural hybridity: Multi-cultural identities and the politics of anti-racism (pp. 106-138). London: Zed Books .
21.
Inda, J. X. (2000). Performativity, materiality, and the racialized body . Latino Studies Journal, 11(3), 74-99 .
22.
Karenga, M. (1997). Black arts: Mute matter given force and function. In H.L. Gates Jr. & N.Y. McKay (Eds.), The Norton anthology of African American literature (pp. 1973-1977). New York: Norton .
23.
Kellner, D. (1995). Media culture: Cultural studies, identity, and politics between the modern and the postmodern. New York: Routledge .
24.
Kelly, J. (in press). Borrowed identities. New York: Peter Lang.
25.
Klein, N. (2000). No logo. New York: HarperCollins .
26.
Marwah, G. (2002, July 21). Blend it like Chadha. Retrieved December 5, 2002, from www.tribuneindia.com/2002/20020721/spectrum/main4.htm
27.
McCarthy, C. (2002). Understanding the work of aesthetics in modern life: Thinking about the cultural studies of education in a time of recession. Unpublished manuscript, Institute of Communications Research, University of Illinois.
28.
McCarthy, C., & Dimitriadis, G. (2000). Globalizing pedagogies: Power, resentment, and the renarration of difference. In R. Mahalingam & C. McCarthy (Eds.), Multicultural curriculum: New directions for social theory, practice, and policy (pp. 70-83). London: Routledge .
29.
Mirón, L. F., & Inda, J. X. (2000). Race as a kind of speech act . Cultural Studies: A Research Annual, 5, 85-107 .
30.
Ong, A. (1998). Flexible citizenship among Chinese cosmopolitans. In P. Cheah & B. Robbins (Eds.), Cosmopolitics: Thinking and feeling beyond the nation (pp. 134-162). Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press .
31.
Ong, A. (1999). Flexible citizenship: The cultural politics of transnationality. Durham, NC: Duke University Press .
32.
Ovenden, K. (2001). 20 Years after Brixton riots: Uprising sparked a wave of revolt. Retrieved December 3 from http://www.socialistworker.co.uk/1742/sw174221.htm
33.
Rai, B (2001). (Un)arranged marriage. London: Corgi .
34.
Schultz, J. (2002, November). Discipline and push up: The public sports bra and technologies of surveillance . Paper presented at the annual conference of the North American Society for the Sociology of Sport, Indianapolis, Indiana.
35.
Silk, M. (2001). Together we’re one? The “place” of the nation in media representations of the 1998 Kuala Lumpur Commonwealth Games . Sociology of Sport Journal, 18(3), 277-301 .
36.
Smith, Z. (2001). White teeth. New York: Vintage International
37.
Sweeting, A. (2002, May 30). Bollywood by numbers: When Lloyd Webber wanted a composer for his Indian musical, it had to be A R Rahman. The Guardian, p. 10.
38.
Wainwright, M. (2002, December 5). Asian ghetto notion dispelled by survey: Prosperity helping move from ‘one-culture’ streets. Retrieved December 6, 2002, from www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,853854,00.html
39.
Wazir, B. (2001, July 24). Identity crisis: Born in Manchester but loyal to Lahore. The Observer, p. 16.
40.
Whannel, G. (2001). Punishment, redemption, and celebration in the popular press: The case of David Beckham. In D. L. Andrews & S. J. Jackson (Eds.), Sport stars: The cultural politics of sporting celebrity. London: Routledge .
41.
Wheatle, A. (2002). East of Acre Lane. London: Fourth Estate .
42.
Wilson, C. (2000). A massive swelling: Celebrity re-examined as a grotesque, crippling disease and other cultural revelations. New York: Viking Press .