Mixed Messages: Multiracial Identities in the "color-blind" EraDavid L. Brunsma Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2006 - 405 páginas The experiences and voices of multiracial individuals are challenging current categories of race, profoundly altering the meaning of racial identity and in the process changing the cultural fabric of the nation. Exploring this new reality, the authors of Mixed Messages examine what we know about multiracial identities - and the implications of those identities for fundamental issues of justice and equality. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 20
Página 226
... described to me the forms of racial abuse she experienced at school and how her mother helped her to cope . Taisha identified her Irish mother's efforts to promote her political and cultural identification with black Carib- bean people ...
... described to me the forms of racial abuse she experienced at school and how her mother helped her to cope . Taisha identified her Irish mother's efforts to promote her political and cultural identification with black Carib- bean people ...
Página 236
... described the unlikelihood that they would date outside their race , citing the influence of their parents . Yet their parents ' preference for same - race dating was described as " concern , " not racism . For example , one college ...
... described the unlikelihood that they would date outside their race , citing the influence of their parents . Yet their parents ' preference for same - race dating was described as " concern , " not racism . For example , one college ...
Página 289
... described their race as " Spanish " or " Hispanic " and sometimes as " Dominican " or " Latino , " but never as " black " or " white , " regardless of phenotype . For Dominican - born individuals such as Wilson ( age seventeen , arrived ...
... described their race as " Spanish " or " Hispanic " and sometimes as " Dominican " or " Latino , " but never as " black " or " white , " regardless of phenotype . For Dominican - born individuals such as Wilson ( age seventeen , arrived ...
Contenido
United States? Eduardo BonillaSilva and David G Embrick | 33 |
An Obstacle to Racial Justice? | 103 |
Racism Whitespace and the Rise of the NeoMulattoes | 117 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 12 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Mixed Messages: Multiracial Identities in the "color-blind" Era David L. Brunsma Vista de fragmentos - 2006 |
Mixed Messages: Multiracial Identities in the "color-blind" Era David L. Brunsma Sin vista previa disponible - 2006 |
Términos y frases comunes
activists advocates African Americans Afro-Americans AMEA ancestry antiracist argue Asian Americans assimilation biological biracial biracial children black and white black/nonblack black/white Bonilla-Silva boundaries Census challenge chapter child civil rights color color-blind concept construction context cultural defined discourse discussion dominant group Dominican Americans ethnic example friends friendships haole Hawai'i Hispanic honorary whites hypodescent iden identity development ideology immigrants integrated interracial families interracial marriage interracial relationships issues Japanese Kanaka Maoli Korgen Latinos MAVIN Foundation midaltern minority mixed-race monoracial mother mulattoes multiracial families multiracial identifier multiracial identity multiracial movement Native Hawaiians neo-mulattoes nonblack nonwhite one-drop rule percent political population problem psychological race relations racial categories racial groups racial identity racial inequality racial justice racial socialization racially mixed racism reparations Rockquemore segregation slavery society sociology Spanish status strategy structural tion understand United white parents white privilege white supremacist whites and blacks whitespace York
Referencias a este libro
Beyond Black: Biracial Identity in America Kerry Rockquemore,David L. Brunsma Vista previa limitada - 2008 |