ABSTRACT This article theorises experiences of racial indignity among Black Africans in Australia by examining how racial misrecognition (disrespect, dismissal, inferiorisation, silencing and erasure) systematically undermines, erodes and compromises their dignity and personhood. Using a dignity‐informed theoretical framework, the study explores how dignity is racialised, constructed, denied and contested within the Australian socio‐political context. It critiques the dominance of ‘race neutral’ and ‘colourblind’ discourses that obscure the routine operations of racism, particularly anti‐Black racism, and their role in positioning Black Africans within marginal and liminal social spaces. The article argues that Australian political and social institutions have yet to meaningfully confront their embedded histories of anti‐Blackness, and proposes 'dignity' as an essential consideration of 'doing' antiracism practice. By centring Afrocentric theoretical and experiential perspectives, the study offers a conceptual vocabulary for articulating the cumulative emotional, psychological and psychic impacts of racial misrecognition, and highlights how racialisation and anti‐Black racism shape everyday experiences of in/dignity.
Gatwiri et al. (Tue,) studied this question.