Racial Mixing = Racial Progress?

Posted in Excerpts/Quotes on 2011-04-22 20:25Z by Steven

Because of our nation’s history of slavery, segregation and interment, racism is conflated with physical racial separation. As a consequence racial progress is conflated with racial mixing. Multiracial individuals and interracial families are touted as icons of racial healing because they are thought to have special insights based on what they are—mixed.

 Marcia Alesan Dawkins, “The Coming MiscegeNation?,” Truthdig, February 13, 2011.

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Darkening Tiger Woods: How post-scandal Tiger Woods lost his whiteness and became Blasian

Posted in Asian Diaspora, Live Events, Media Archive, Social Work, United States on 2011-04-22 03:32Z by Steven

Darkening Tiger Woods: How post-scandal Tiger Woods lost his whiteness and became Blasian

Asian American Cultural Center Lounge
1210 W. Nevada Street
Urbana, Illinois
2011-04-25, 14:00 CDT (Local Time)

Myra Washington, Assistant Professor of Communication & Journalism
University of New Mexico

The rhetoric around Tiger Woods, after his extramarital affairs became public, demonstrates the complexities in which Blackness and Asianness were deployed to shame, emasculate, understand, praise, pity, and mock him. Via text, Woods himself shifts his identity from Cablinasian (on Oprah) to Blasian, which media organizations used in part used to frame his behavior. His self-identification brought Blasians under scrutiny, which resulted in moves to protect the Blasian brand. Myra Washington is a PhD candidate in the Institute of Communications Research. Her dissertation explores Black/Asian (Blasian) multiracial identity and its representations through analyzing mediated constructions of Blasian celebrities specifically Kimora Lee Simmons, Hines Ward, and post-cheating scandal Tiger Woods. Using the increase in recognition of multiracial celebrities who identify as Black and Asian and the popularity of these celebrities specifically, Washington’s project interrogates if and how their visibility and success allows for other similarly mixed up [?? actual wording in announcement] mixed-race people to claim visibility for themselves. Washington received the 2010 Jeffrey S. Tanaka Asian American Studies Grant for graduate students.

For more information, click here.

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The Missing Box: Multiracial Student Identity Development at a Predominately White Institution

Posted in Campus Life, Dissertations, Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive, United States on 2011-04-22 02:51Z by Steven

The Missing Box: Multiracial Student Identity Development at a Predominately White Institution

University of Nebraska, Lincoln
May 2011
153 pages

Ashley Michelle Loudd

A Thesis Presented to the Faculty of The Graduate College at the University of Nebraska In Partial Fulfillment of Requirements For the Degree of Master of Arts

The purpose of this study was to add to the growing body of research aimed at deciphering the unique identity development experiences of multiracial college students. In doing so, this particular study sought to explore the process for self-identified multiracial students attending a Mid-western predominately white institution. Personal interviews and a focus group were utilized to delve into the students’ stories, and the participants’ pathways through negotiating their racial identities were linked with Renn’s (2004) ecological identity development patterns. The result was an in-depth and critical understanding of how a predominately white institution places multiracial students in an unsupportive environment, where they are often forced into racial identities that they might not have otherwise chosen for themselves.

This study explored how five self-identified multiracial students’ experiences attending a predominately white institution led to Renn’s (2004) ecological patterns of multiracial identity development through the completion of five interviews and one focus group. The following sub-themes emerged from the analysis of the participants’ connection to Renn’s (2004) five ecological patterns of multiracial identity development: “I think diversity is important,” “I am proud of my heritage,” “I’ll switch back and forth between my identities,” “Identifying as ‘x’ and ‘y’ – that’s key,” “Why can’t you be both,” “I classify for ease, but this is who I really am,” “People like me only happen in America,” “I’m racially ambiguous,” “Too Black to be White, too White to be Black,” and “The amount of non-White people is very low.” The results from this qualitative study indicated that the process of identity development for multiracial students attending a predominately white institution is highly influenced by the environment, leaving them little agency in determining how they racially identify and forcing them to enter situational modes of identity. Implications for multiracial student identity development, as well as, student affairs practitioners are provided. Additionally, recommendations for future research are reviewed.

Table of Contents

  • Chapter 1 – Introduction
    • Context
    • Purpose Statement
    • Significance of Study
    • Research Questions
    • Research Design
    • Definition of Terms
    • Delimitations
    • Limitations
    • Conclusion
  • Chapter 2 – Literature Review
    • Introduction
    • The Culture of Predominately White Institutions
    • The Student of Color Experience at Predominately White Institutions
    • Racial Identity Development Models
      • Helms’s People of Color and White Racial Identity Models
      • Cross’s Model of Black Identity Development
      • Ferdman and Gallegos’s Model of Latino Identity Development
      • Kim’s Asian American Identity Development Model
    • Theoretical Approaches Exploring the Multiracial Experience of Identity Development
      • The Problem Approach
      • The Equivalent Approach
      • The Variant Approach
    • Foundational Theories and Models of Multiracial Identity Development
      • Integrated Identity
      • Multiracial Identity
      • Positive Alterity
    • Summary of the Literature
    • Theoretical Framework
      • Student holds a monoracial identity
      • Student holds multiple monoracial identities, shifting according to situation
      • Student holds a multiracial identity
      • Student holds an extraracial identity by deconstructing race or opting out of identification by U.S. racial categories
      • Student holds a situational identity, identifying differently in different contexts
    • Looking Ahead
  • Chapter 3 – Methodology
    • Introduction
    • Study Rationale
    • Research Questions
    • Methodology Rationale
    • Epistemology and Theoretical Perspective
    • Participants
    • Research Site
    • Data Collection
      • Interviews
      • Focus Group
    • Data Analysis
    • Validation Techniques
    • Researcher Bias and Assumptions
    • Limitations
    • Strengths
    • Conclusion
  • Chapter 4 – Findings
    • Introduction
    • Introduction to the Participants
    • Overview of Emergent Themes and Sub-themes
      • Theme 1: Monoracial Identity
        • “I think diversity is important.”
        • “I am proud of my heritage.”
        • Ecological Analysis
      • Theme 2: Multiple Monoracial Identities, Shifting According to Situation
        • “I’ll switch back and forth between my identities.”
        • “Identifying with ‘x’ and ‘y’ – that’s key.”
        • Ecological Analysis
      • Theme 3: Multiracial Identity
        • “Why can’t you be both?”
        • “I classify for ease, but this is who I really am.”
        • Ecological Analysis
      • Theme 4: Extraracial Identity
        • “People like me only happen in America.”
        • “I’m racially ambiguous.”
        • Ecological Analysis
      • Theme 5: Situational Identity, Identifying Differently in Different Contexts
        • “Too Black to be White, too White to be Black.”
        • “The amount of non-White people is very low.”
        • Ecological Analysis
    • Conclusion
  • Chapter 5 – Discussion
    • Introduction
    • Summary of Findings and Link to Theoretical Perspective
      • Research Sub-question 1
      • Research Sub-question 2
      • Research Sub-question 3
      • Overall Implications
    • Implications of the Current Study for Student Affairs Practitioners
    • Recommendations for Future Research
    • Conclusion
  • References
  • Appendices

List of Tables

  • Table 1: Participant Demographic Information
  • Table 2: Qualitative Research Validation Techniques
  • Table 3: Research Themes and Sub-themes

List of Appendices

  • Appendix A: Informed Consent Form
  • Appendix B: Recruitment E-mail to Potential Participants
  • Appendix C: Reminder E-mail to Participants
  • Appendix D: Participant Demographic Sheet
  • Appendix E: Semi-Structured Interview Protocol
  • Appendix F: Un-Structured Focus Group Protocol
  • Appendix G: Transcriptionist Confidentiality Agreement
  • Appendix H: Example of Coded Participant Transcript

Read the entire thesis here.

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Brazil’s census offers recognition at last to descendants of runaway slaves

Posted in Anthropology, Articles, Brazil, Caribbean/Latin America, Census/Demographics, Media Archive, Slavery, Social Science on 2011-04-22 02:43Z by Steven

Brazil’s census offers recognition at last to descendants of runaway slaves

The Guardian
2010-08-25

Tom Phillip

Interviewers plan to reach 190m people, including the long-ignored Kalunga, by motorbike, plane, canoe and donkey

When Jorge Moreira de Oliveira’s great-great-great-great-great-grandfather arrived in Brazil in the 18th century he was counted off the slave-ship, branded and dispatched to a goldmine deep in the country’s arid mid-west. After years of scrambling for gold that was shipped to Europe, he fled and became one of the founding fathers of the Kalunga quilombo, a remote mountain-top community of runaway slaves.

On Wednesday last week, more than 200 years later, it was Moreira’s turn to be counted—this time not by slavemasters but by Cleber, a chubby census taker who appeared at his home clutching a blue personal digital assistant (PDA).

“I’m Kalunga. A Brazilian Kalunga,” Moreira told his visitor from the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics, who diligently noted down details about the interviewee’s eight children, monthly income and toilet arrangements.

Such is Brazil’s 2010 census—a gigantic logistical operation that aims to count and analyse the lives of more than 190 million people in one of the most geographically and racially diverse nations on earth…

…Identity

“It is a question of identity,” said Ivonete Carvalho, the government’s programme director for traditional communities. “When you assert your identity you are saying you want [government] action and access to public policies. [The census] is a fantastic x-ray.”

The Kalungas’ fight for recognition is part of a wider movement for racial equality in Brazil, a country with deep roots in Africa but where Afro-Brazilian politicians and business leaders remain few and far between. According to Carvalho, only one of Brazil’s 81 senators is black, despite the fact that Afro-Brazilians represent at least 53% of the population. The last census found that fewer than 40% of Afro-Brazilians had access to sanitation compared with nearly 63% of whites.

Just as descendents of Brazil’s runaway slaves are finding their voice—and telling the census takers about it—so too are Brazil’s officially black and indigenous communities swelling as a growing number of Brazilians label themselves “black” or “indigenous” rather than “mulatto” when the census takers come knocking.

“People are no longer scared of identifying themselves or insecure about saying: ‘I’m black, and black is beautiful,’ ” Brazil’s minister for racial equality, Elio Ferreira de Araujo, told the Guardian…

Read the entire article here.

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Race and Multiraciality in Brazil and the United States: Converging Paths? [Review: Johnson]

Posted in Anthropology, Articles, Book/Video Reviews, Brazil, Caribbean/Latin America, Media Archive, Social Science, United States on 2011-04-22 02:32Z by Steven

Race and Multiraciality in Brazil and the United States: Converging Paths? [Review: Johnson]

American Anthropologist
Volume 110, Issue 1 (March 2008)
pp. 79–80
ISSN 0002-7294; online ISSN 1548-1433
DOI: 10.1111/j.1548-1433.2008.00013.x

Amanda Walker Johnson, Assistant Professor of Anthropology
University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Race and Multiraciality in Brazil and the United States: Converging Paths? G. Reginald Daniel. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2006. 365 pp.

Globalization and Race: Transformations in the Cultural Production of Blackness. Kamari Maxine Clarke and Deborah A. Thomas, eds. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2006. 407 pp.

These two books discuss the racial formations of blackness from the foundations of early capitalism and modernist nation-state formation through contemporary transformations. Both caution against the silencing of race, particularly the dangers of “colorblindness” in political engagement and in theorizations of globalization, but both books also forge critiques of race essentialism. Whereas Globalization and Race explores geopolitics and notions of “diaspora,” Race and Multiraciality explores lineage and multiraciality. The methodological and theoretical approaches are what most separate these texts, as Globalization and Race centers on ethnographies and anthropological theories whereas Race and Multiraciality combines analysis of secondary historical and demographic data and sociological theories…

Race and Multiraciality compares racial formations in the United States and Brazil, particularly the dimensions of blackness and multiraciality. Daniel argues that the ending of legal segregation in the United States—coupled with challenges to the “binary racial project” or white–black paradigm by multiracial movements—and the disruption of the notion of “racial democracy” and the “ternary racial project” (or white–multiracial–black paradigm) in Brazil by the movements for African Brazilian recognition and racial equality have sent the United States and Brazil on converging paths. Daniel juxtaposes the “Latin Americanization” (p. 259) of U.S. racial politics in the context of emerging recognition of multiraciality and desires for colorblind “racial democracy” with the “Anglo Americanization” (p. 285) of Brazilian racial politics. This is done in the context of increasing dichotomization of negro–branco (black–white) and the interpellation of multiracial people into a unified and “race-d”—versus “colored” as in the colonial and census terms pretos and pardo—African Brazilian identity. Daniel seeks to disrupt the notion that multiraciality is inherently problematic as well as to expose the untenability of colorblindness, particularly in its neoliberal form.

Daniel’s historicization of trajectories of Eurocentrism that underline both “whitening” in Brazil and antimiscegenation in the United States—including the “paranoia about invisible blackness” (p. 37) and the granting of privilege in terms of behavioral and phenotypic proximity to Europeanness that pervaded both nation’s racial projects—seems to suggest that the processes of racial formation in the two nations have converged, or at least intersected, at prior historical moments to the contemporary era. Although he explores the complexity of “Latin” American colonization models in Louisiana and the Southwest as they confront the “Anglo” models of the “North and Upper South,” he overlooks the mythification of the U.S. post–Civil War “North” as itself a variant of a “racial democracy.” In my view, the linearity of his model or metaphor of “converging paths” undermines his attempts to problematize U.S. and Brazilian racial projects. Additionally, although Daniel critiques the “binary racial project” in the United States, he also tends to reify it, at times conflating multiraciality with black and white biraciality (see pp. 173, 295). The racialization of Asian Americans in the United States and Brazil disappears in both his theorization of the “binary” and “ternary” models of race and also his discussions of multiracial movements…

Read or purchase the review here.

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Truthdig Radio with Marcia Dawkins

Posted in Audio, Identity Development/Psychology, Live Events, Media Archive, Politics/Public Policy, Social Science, United States, Women on 2011-04-22 00:47Z by Steven

Truthdig Radio with Marcia Dawkins

Truthdig Radio
KPFK 90.7 FM (Los Angeles); 98.7 FM (Santa Barbara); 99.5 FM (China Lake); 93.7 North San Diego
Wednesday, 2011-04-20, 21:00Z (14:00 PDT, 17:00 EDT)

Kasia Anderson, Host and Associate Editor

Marcia Alesan Dawkins, Visiting Scholar
Brown University

Dr. Dawkins discusses mixed race identities, press (including the 2011-04-18 CNN article, “Neither black nor white: Three multiracial generations, one family” by Thom Patterson) and the census.

List to the interview here (Ends at 00:10:57).

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