Manufacturing citizenship: Metapragmatic framings of language competencies in media images of mixed race men in South Korea

Posted in Anthropology, Articles, Asian Diaspora, Communications/Media Studies, Media Archive, Social Science on 2011-07-18 21:15Z by Steven

Manufacturing citizenship: Metapragmatic framings of language competencies in media images of mixed race men in South Korea

Discourse & Society
Volume 22, Number 4 (July 2011)
pagesw 440-457
DOI: 10.1177/0957926510395834

Adrienne Lo, Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Asian American Studies
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Jenna Kim
Department of Educational Psychology
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

This article examines how discourses of linguistic (in)competency regiment productions of citizenship in the South Korean popular media. Through an analysis of newspaper articles and television programs, we investigate how depictions of language competency become key resources for locating individuals within genealogies of kinship and chronotopic figures of personhood. In some cases, the speech of these celebrities associates them with imaginings of their backwards, low-class Korean kin, the Japanese colonial period, and American military presence, while in other cases, their language is associated with the 21st-century ideal of the modern, elite, globetrotting neoliberal subject. This analysis demonstrates how competence is read in relation to changing notions of citizenship in the new ‘multicultural’ Korea as these men are differentially positioned between multiple raced, classed, and gendered imaginings of Whiteness and Koreanness. More generally, we argue that understandings of linguistic competence are social productions, rather than reflections of language ability.

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Gender Differences in Ancestral Contribution and Admixture in Venezuelan Populations

Posted in Articles, Caribbean/Latin America, Health/Medicine/Genetics, Media Archive on 2011-07-18 20:31Z by Steven

Gender Differences in Ancestral Contribution and Admixture in Venezuelan Populations

Human Biology
Volume 83, Number 3 (June 2011)
pages 345-361
E-ISSN: 1534-6617 Print ISSN: 0018-7143

D. Castro De Guerra
Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas

C. Figuera Perez
Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas

M. H. Izaguirre
Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas

E. Arroyo Barahona
Universidad Central de Venezuela

A. Rodriguez Larralde
Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Científicas

M. Vivenes De Lugo
Universidad de Oriente

The origin of the contribution of uniparental heritage were analyzed in 615 samples of individuals proceeding from 13 towns classified according to historic differences in their emergence and development as African-derived, European-derived, and admixed/urban. Mitochondrial and Y-chromosome haplogroups were identified by PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism. The results were compared with previous estimates of admixture made with autosomal markers and with historic aspects. The results show a predominantly indigenous genetic contribution through the female, being more prevalent in urban populations; the African contribution, although dispersed, presents a larger concentration in the African-derived towns, whereas the European contribution is limited to populations with this origin, reflecting isolation and the conservation of the distribution pattern of genes of the Colonial era. With regard to admixture through males, it is almost exclusively of European origin, whereas the African contribution is basically concentrated in the African-derived towns, and the Amerindian lineages are almost nonexistent. The genome of paternal heredity, as opposed to the autosomal and the mitochondrial, shows a homogeneous pattern of admixture that is independent of the origin of the population studied, suggesting that European genes have been introduced into the Venezuelan population through male immigrations, whereas the indigenous contribution has been preserved in the Venezuelan genetic pool through the women. These results provide evidence of the heterogeneity in the genetic origin of the Venezuelan population, which should be taken into account in forensic and epidemiologic genetic studies.

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Multiracial Teens Launch A ‘Latte Rebellion’

Posted in Articles, Audio, Book/Video Reviews, Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive, United States on 2011-07-18 20:19Z by Steven

Multiracial Teens Launch A ‘Latte Rebellion’

Tell Me More
National Public Radio
2011-07-15

Michel Martin, Host

“You’re half Chinese and half European, I’m half Indian, a quarter Mexican and a quarter Irish. We’re mixed up. We’re not really one or the other ethnically. We’re like human lattes.”

So explains Asha, the main character in Sarah Jamila Stevenson’s debut novel, The Latte Rebellion.

To raise money for a class trip she and her friends began as selling a few T-shirts and labeled the effort the Latte Rebellion. But the movement soon became something much larger than they could have anticipated.

Seen through the eyes of adolescents, Asha and her friends tackle the complexities of identifying as multiracial during adolescence, when identifying as anything seems like a challenge.

“At the time I was writing it … there were still some news stories about South Asians who were getting harassed and insulted, and even assaulted,” Stevenson said in an interview with Tell Me More host Michel Martin. “And because I’m part South Asian myself, it really hit close to home. It had me worried about my relatives who live in the United States. So I felt pretty strongly about working that into my book somewhere.”…

Read the transcript here.  Listen to the interview here.

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‘In The Blink Of An Eye,’ A Change In Racial Identity

Posted in Articles, Audio, Biography, Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive, United States on 2011-07-18 18:33Z by Steven

‘In The Blink Of An Eye,’ A Change In Racial Identity

All Things Considered
National Public Radio
2011-07-07

Michele Norris, Host

Michael Sidney Fosberg grew up thinking he was white. His mother is white. His stepfather is white. And while he never met his biological father, the assumption was that he was white too. But well into his adulthood, Fosberg found out that his father was a black man. Michele Norris speaks to him about his story that he’s told in his one-man play and his book, both called Incognito.

Read the transcript of the interview here.  Listen to the interview here.

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