hypodescent

Posted in Definitions, Social Science on 2009-06-16 21:17Z by Steven

Hypodescent is the practice of determining the classification of a child of mixed-race ancestry by assigning the child the race of his or her more socially subordinate parent.  Because Caucasians were historically socially dominant in the Western world, mixed-race children in slave societies were most frequently assigned the status of their non-Caucasian parent.  This was also to keep them classified as property, which slaves were.  In some colonial societies, however, especially the Catholic Portuguese, Spanish and French, a third class of “people of color” developed.

Wikipedia

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Mix-d:

Posted in Definitions, United Kingdom on 2009-06-16 21:10Z by Steven

mix-d: (pronounced “mixed”) Describes a position of pride and place where one can bring all sides of their cultural identity together and express an identity which is similar to but not specifically like either. By dropping the term race we make a step forward and begin to talk about a fully lived experience rather than constantly referring to an outdated social construct which keeps us trapped in the past.

Bradley Lincoln, The Multiple Heritage Project

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Psuedoscience

Posted in Excerpts/Quotes on 2009-06-16 03:35Z by Steven

…professors and medical doctors offered scientific evidence that ‘race mixture’ contaminated Europeans, biologically and culturally, and gave rise to a population of mixed origins that was physically inferior and psychologically unstable. …At the same time, the vigour with which White men opposed ‘race mixture’ officially, especially for men of colour, was exceeded only by the fervour with which they practiced it privately…

Stephen Small’s (2001) ‘Colour, Culture and Class: Interrogating Interrracial Marriage and People of Mixed  Racial Descent in the USA’…

Multiracialism

Posted in Excerpts/Quotes, Politics/Public Policy on 2009-06-16 01:26Z by Steven

What this current discourse is about is lifting the lid of racial oppression in our institutions and letting people identify with the totality of their heritage. We have created a nightmare for human dignity. Multiracialism has the potential for undermining the very basis of racism, which is its categories.

(G. Reginald Daniel, The New Yorker, 1994-07-25)

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