Mixed-race students struggle to find their identityPosted in Articles, Campus Life, Media Archive, United States on 2015-09-28 19:43Z by Steven |
Mixed-race students struggle to find their identity
The Daily Pennsylvanian
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
2015-09-28
Elizabeth Winston
Many students seem to effortlessly fit into cultural groups at Penn [University of Pennsylvania], but for some, itâs more complicated than simply choosing one.
For mixed-race students, finding racial or cultural groups to identify with can be more of a challenge. Being from a mixed cultural background comes with unique experiences that are more complex than simply combining the two â or more.
College sophomore Emily Marucci is Chinese, but was adopted into a white family at a very young age. She said people âare always confused [why] my last name is Italian. Itâs too long to be Asian.â
âI feel like sometimes Iâm expected to be in different circles than I am,â Marucci added. âRacially, Iâm supposed to be Asian-American, but I identify more as white. No one ever thinks that when they look at me.â
Wharton sophomore Deena Char also identifies with this frustration. With a mix of Japanese, French and Native-American backgrounds, she finds it insulting when people pigeonhole her into one identity.
âJust because Iâm Asian, it doesnât mean that I want to be in an Asian organization,â Char said.
One of the struggles mixed-race people face is formally identifying their ethnicities on demographic forms. Often they must fill in a bubble marked âother,â choose one identity over the other or occasionally have the option to choose a âmultiracialâ or âmixedâ bubble.
âTo lump us all into one ânone of the aboveâ category just doesnât feel right,â Wharton sophomore Avery Stephenson, who identifies as Filipino and black, said…
Read the entire article here.