What Comes Naturally: Miscegenation Law and the Making of Race in America

Posted in Books, History, Law, Media Archive, Monographs, United States on 2013-03-31 00:57Z by Steven

What Comes Naturally: Miscegenation Law and the Making of Race in America

Oxford University Press
December 2008
404 pages
ISBN13: 9780195094633
ISBN10: 0195094638

Peggy Pascoe (1954-2010), Beekman Professor of Northwest and Pacific History
University of Oregon

  • Winner of the Ellis W. Hawley Prize of the Organization of American Historians (2009)
  • Winner of the Lawrence W. Levine Award of the Organization of American Historians (2009)
  • Winner of the William H. Dunning Prize of the American Historical Association
  • Winner of the James Willard Hurst Prize of the Law and Society Association
  • Winner of the Joan Kelly Memorial Prize of the American Historical Association
  • Finalist, John Hope Franklin Prize of the American Studies Association

A long-awaited history that promises to dramatically change our understanding of race in America, What Comes Naturally traces the origins, spread, and demise of miscegenation laws in the United States–laws that banned interracial marriage and sex, most often between whites and members of other races. Peggy Pascoe demonstrates how these laws were enacted and applied not just in the South but throughout most of the country, in the West, the North, and the Midwest.  Beginning in the Reconstruction era, when the term miscegenation first was coined, she traces the creation of a racial hierarchy that bolstered white supremacy and banned the marriage of Whites to Chinese, Japanese, Filipinos, and American Indians as well as the marriage of Whites to Blacks.  She ends not simply with the landmark 1967 case of Loving v. Virginia, in which the Supreme Court finally struck down miscegenation laws throughout the country, but looks at the implications of ideas of colorblindness that replaced them. What Comes Naturally is both accessible to the general reader and informative to the specialist, a rare feat for an original work of history based on archival research.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Part I: Miscegenation Law and Constitutional Equality, 1863-1883
    • 1. Engendering Miscegenation
    • 2. Sexualizing Miscegenation Law
  • Part II: Miscegenation Law and Race Classification, 1860-1948
    • 3. Configuring Race in the American West
    • 4. The Facts of Race in the Courtroom
    • 5. Seeing Like a Racial State
  • Part III: Miscegenation Law and Its Opponents, 1913-1967
    • 6. Between a Rock and a Hard Place
    • 7. Interracial Marriage as a Natural Right
    • 8. Interracial Marriage as a Civil Right
  • Part IV: Miscegenation Law, Civil Rights, and Colorblindness, 1964-2000
    • 9. Lionizing Loving
    • Conclusion: The Ghost of the Past
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Challenging Multiracial Identity

Posted in Anthropology, Books, Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive, Monographs, Politics/Public Policy, United States on 2013-03-31 00:56Z by Steven

Challenging Multiracial Identity

Lynne Rienner Publishers
2006
135 pages
Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-58826-424-4

Rainier Spencer, Director and Professor of Afro-American Studies; Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies
University of Nevada, Las Vegas

What is multiracialism—and what are the theoretical consequences and practical costs of asserting a multiracial identity? Arguing that the multiracial movement bolsters, rather than subverts, traditional categories of race, Rainier Spencer critically assesses current scholarship in support of multiracial identity.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction: Expecting Excellence in the Field of Multiracial Identity Studies
  • Projection as Reality: Three Authors, Three Studies, One Problem
  • Psychobabble, Socioblather, and the Reinscription of the Pathology Paradigm
  • White Mothers, the Loving Legend, and Manufacturing a Biracial Baby Boom
  • Distinction Without Difference: The Insidious Argument for First-Generation Black/White Multiracial Identity
  • The Road Forward
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The 1850 census marked a watershed in census-taking in several ways…

Posted in Census/Demographics, Excerpts/Quotes on 2013-03-31 00:20Z by Steven

The 1850 census marked a watershed in census-taking in several ways. For our purposes, a large part of its significance rests in the introduction of the “mulatto” category and the reasons for its introduction. This category was added not because of demographic shifts, but because of the lobbying efforts of race scientists and the willingness of certain senators to do their bidding. More generally, the mulatto category signaled the ascendance of scientific authority within racial discourse. By the 1850s, polygenist thought was winning a battle that it had lost in Europe. The “American school of ethnology” distinguished itself from prevailing European racial thought through its insistence that human races were distinct and unequal species. That polygenism endured at all was a victory, since the European theorists to abandon it. Moreover, there was considerable resistance to it in the United States. Although most American monogenists were not racial egalitarians, they were initially unwilling to accept claims of separate origins, permanent racial differences, and the infertility of racial mixture. Polygenists deliberately sought hard statistical data to prove that mulattoes, as hybrids of different racial species, were less fertile than their pure-race parents and lived shorter lives.

Melissa Nobles, “History Counts: A Comparative Analysis of Racial/Color Categorization in US and Brazilian Censuses,” American Journal of Public Health, Volume 90, Number 11 (November 2000): 1738-1745.

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