racialize
racialize — 動詞
- racializepresent simple I / you / we / they
- racializes3rd person singular
- racializing-ing form
- racializedpast simple
1. to view, describe, or treat something — such as a social issue, a community, or
種族化
以種族觀點看待或分類
to view, describe, or treat something — such as a social issue, a community, or a personal situation — in a way that makes race the central or defining lens, often by introducing racial categories or meanings where they did not originally exist.
Hassan argued that the news media often racialize poverty by linking it to specific ethnic groups.
Hassan 認為,新聞媒體往往將貧窮問題種族化,將其與特定族裔群體連結。
racialize + object (poverty as a social issue)
The school's attendance policy was racialized after some parents claimed it singled out Asian students.
該校的出席政策被種族化,因為有些家長聲稱這項政策是針對亞裔學生。
passive: be racialized
Linh felt that calling a noise complaint a 'racial conflict' only racialized a simple dispute.
Linh 覺得,把噪音投訴稱為「種族衝突」,只是將一個單純的糾紛種族化了。
Critics say the crime statistics racialize public safety by focusing on minority neighbourhoods.
批評者認為,犯罪統計數據將公共安全種族化,因為焦點集中在少數族群社區。
Asher noticed the highway debate was racialized once speakers linked it to immigrant populations.
Asher 注意到,高速公路的辯論一旦與移民人口掛鉤,就變得種族化了。
- racially categorize
more literal and descriptive; less common in everyday speech
- racialise
British English spelling of the same word
- essentialize by race
stronger, more academic; implies reducing people or issues to fixed racial traits
- deracialize
to remove or reduce the racial character or framing of something; much rarer
- universalize
to treat as a general human issue rather than a race-specific one
文法句型
racialize + object
be racialized (passive)
用法筆記
Frequently appears in the passive voice (be racialized). Common in academic, political, and journalistic discourse. Using this verb often carries a critical tone — the speaker implies that the racial framing is unnecessary, misleading, or harmful.