• Book Review: Dispatches from the Color Line: The Press and Multiracial America

    Hot Topics in Journalism and Mass Communication
    2010-05-19

    Queenie A. Byars, Assistant Professor of Journalism and Mass Communication
    University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

    Dispatches from the Color Line: The Press and Multiracial America. Catherine R. Squires. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2007.

    When Dispatches from the Color Line was published, Barack Obama was still  the junior senator from Illinois and fresh from a rousing keynote speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention. Fast forward to 2009 and President Barack Obama has jokingly compared his multiracial identity to that of a mixed-breed dog. Obama’s joking aside, the October 2009 case of a Louisiana justice of the peace refusing to issue a marriage license to an interracial couple is no laughing matter, and underscores the value of this book.

    Catherine R. Squires is the Cowles Professor of Journalism, Diversity and Equality at the University of Minnesota. Her scholarly work in Dispatches from the Color Line offers serious discourse on the media’s role in framing the identity of multiracial people. She uses case study analysis to examine this issue…

    Read the entire review here.

  • Not-Black by Default

    The Nation
    Diary of a Mad Law Professor
    2010-04-21

    Patricia J. Williams, James L. Dohr Professor of Law
    Columbia University

    Most people who appear phenotypically “black” don’t play around when the government asks them to report their race.

    Last week, Melissa Harris-Lacewell wrote an insightful column, “Black by Choice,” about President Obama’s having checked the box marked “Black, African American or Negro” on his Census form. As she notes, despite the way his complex heritage both disrupts “standard definitions of blackness” and creates “a definitional crisis for whiteness,” in American culture “having a white parent has never meant becoming white” if one also has an African-descended parent…

    Read the entire article here.

  • America’s Mixed-Race Kids Examine Their Identity

    Voice of America News
    2010-05-05

    Faiza Elmasry
    Washington, DC

    Photographs celebrate richness and beauty of multiracial society

    At least seven million Americans identify themselves as belonging to more than one race, and interest is rapidly growing in issues of multi-racial identity.

    In his new book, “Mixed: [Portraits of Multiracial Kids],” writer and artist Kip Fulbeck presents a collection of portraits celebrating the faces of mixed-race children.

    Kip Fulbeck grew up in a multi-racial family.

    His father was English, Irish and Welsh. He had a Chinese mother and Chinese step-siblings. At home, he says, he was considered the white kid, but at school he was the Asian kid. Exploring the multi-racial identity has inspired Fulbeck’s works, including his recent photography book…

    Read the entire article here.

  • At last! It’s cool to be mixed race (which is handy because I’m African, American, Jewish, Geordie, Irish, Scottish and Hungarian)

    The Daily Mail (United Kingdom)
    2010-04-25

    Oona King, Head of Diversity
    Channel 4

    Comment by Steven F. Riley

    It should be noted that scientists have determined that there is more genetic variation within so-called racial groups that outside of them. On a personal (non-scientific note), my wife and I know an interracial couple with a child who hasDown’s Syndrome.

    White supremacy is so last century. These days it’s on-trend to be a mixed-race supremacist. Unlike the British National Party, mixed-race people can now point to scientifically credible research that highlights the various biological advantages of their ethnicity.

    And that’s not to mention the anecdotal evidence pointing to sports stars and celebrities such as Lewis Hamilton, Theo Walcott and Leona Lewis as representing the new ideal of physical beauty.

    But is this just a media fad, sparked by the election of the world’s most famous mixed-race person as President of the United States? And now that mixed-race people are our fastest growing ethnic group, what does it mean for Britain’s uneasy relationship with race?..

    …And now it seems that mixed race genes are being hailed as the latest Darwinian ‘must-have’ accessory. If you spent your childhood being called a ‘mongrel’ in the playground, the recent research by Cardiff University, which seems to show that mixed-race people are more attractive and more successful, may bring a wry smile to your face.

    Dr. Michael Lewis, who conducted the research said: ‘Darwin suggested that diversity of genes led to greater genetic fitness and this in turn seems to be linked to attractiveness.’

    Far from being an abomination of the natural order, mixed-race children are apparently biologically preferable. The logic is that the wider the gene pool (the further apart genetically two parents are) the greater protection from illness or genetic abnormality their children enjoy…

    Read the entire article here.

  • The Multiracial Sheep IS the White Supremacist Fox

    Black Agenda Report: the journal of African American political thought and action
    2010-03-16

    Jared A. Ball, Associate Professor of Communication Studies
    Morgan State University, Baltimore, Maryland

    A government and society that is ever ready to restrict the freedoms of Black folks now offers “freedom” from Blackness. This census and social “opt-out” for the progeny of interracial couples allows them to hope to be considered “as something entirely separate, different and apart from” what Curtis Mayfield called the “dark deep well.” The Black “baggage” can be left behind.

    Let’s be very clear from the outset.  Multiracial categorization is an aggressive defense of white supremacy.  Multiracial census categorization, particularly in the era of what some are calling the first Black and multiracial president, is, pun-intended, the bulked up steroid-induced version of the old sports aphorism that “the best defense is a good offense.”  By aggressively encouraging younger generations to identify officially as multiracial the national desire to disappear worsening racial divides gets further juice by offering folks a chance to both adopt the illusion of the “post-racial” and to seemingly categorize themselves away from, if not out of, oppression. The beautiful dialectic traditionally developed in this country’s form of white supremacy was its built-in inability to be white and forced inclusion into Black which has made Black America, if even to a fault, among the most diverse, open and accepting communities in the world.  It also increased the potential that that community would become more threatening to white domination which has led to the centuries-long development of neocolonial-styled light-skin privilege as a mechanism of siphoning off some of the more willing participants in an escape from blackness…

    Read the entire article here.

  • The Marital Patterns of Multiracial People in the United States: A Comparison of Asian/Whites and Black/Whites

    American Sociological Association Annual Meeting
    Hilton San Francisco
    San Francisco, California
    2009-08-08
    20 pages

    Michael Miyawaki
    Fordham University

    In this paper, I examine and compare the marital patterns of two multiracial groups—Asian/whites and black/whites—in the United States. Examining the marital behavior of multiracial people is of particular importance to understanding their state of assimilation. Furthermore, the race of their spouse has important consequences for the racial classification of their offspring. Because the racial identity and experience of multiracial people differ by racial background (i.e., Asian/white, black/white, etc.), there may be differences in the marital patterns of multiracial subgroups in a marriage market segmented by race. In this study, I limit my analysis to non-Latino Asian/white adults (18 and older) married to non-Latino whites, Asians, and Asian/whites, and non-Latino black/white adults married to non-Latino whites, blacks, and black/whites. To compare the odds of Asian/whites and black/whites marrying whites, their nonwhite counterparts, and their multiracial counterparts, I use multinomial logistic regression. While both Asian/whites and black/whites are most likely to marry whites, results show significant differences between the two groups in terms of their odds of marrying whites, nonwhites, and multiracials. Whereas Asian/whites are more likely than black/whites to marry whites (vs. nonwhites) and multiracials (vs. nonwhites), black/whites are more likely than Asian/whites to marry nonwhites. Thus, results demonstrate that not only is the marriage market segmented by race among monoracials, it is also racially segmented among multiracials.

    To read the entire paper, click here.

  • Politics and policies: attitudes toward multiracial Americans

    Ethnic and Racial Studies
    First Published on: 2010-04-15
    Volume 33, Issue 9 (October 2010)
    pages 1511-1536
    DOI: 10.1080/01419871003671929

    Mary E. Campbell, Associate Professor of Sociology
    University of Iowa

    Melissa R. Herman, Assistant Professor of Sociology
    Dartmouth College

    The growing prominence of the multiracial population in the United States is prompting new questions about attitudes toward multiracial people and popular opinion of policies designed to protect them from discrimination. Currently, American anti-discrimination policies are directed at groups who identify with a single race, but the rising profile of multiracial groups introduces new complexity into questions about racial policy. In this study, we find generally positive affect toward multiracial people, although monoracial minorities are more positive toward multiracial people than whites are. About half of the monoracial minorities and the majority of whites oppose including multiracial people in anti-discrimination policies. Attitudes are associated with traditional predictors such as education and political beliefs, and also with the racial heterogeneity of the local context and intimate contact with other racial groups. Although multiracial people report experiencing discrimination at levels similar to those of monoracial minorities, our results suggest there may be significant resistance to anti-discrimination policies that include multiracial groups. 

    Read the entire article here.

  • Ethnically mixed individuals: Cultural Homelessness or Multicultural Integration?

    University of North Texas
    May 1999
    260 pages
    15 tables, 6 illustrations, references, 273 titles

    Veronica Navarrete-Vivero, B. S. CPR
    University of North Texas

    Thesis Prepared for the Degree of Master of Science of Psychology

    Studies addressing racial/ethnic identity development have often overlooked the developmental cultural context. The impact of growing up with contradictory cultures has not been well explored. Immersion in multiple cultures may produce mixed patterns of strengths deficits.

    This study reviews the literature’s currently inconsistent usage of the terms race, ethnicity, and culture; introduces the concept and theoretical framework of Cultural Homelessness [(CH)]; relates CH to multicultural integration; and develops two study-specific measures (included) to examine the construct validity of CH.

    The sample’s (N= 448, 67% women) racial, ethnic, and cultural mixture was coded back three generations using complex coding criteria. Empirical findings supported the CH-specific pattern of cognitive and social strengths with emotional difficulties: social adaptability and cross-cultural competence but also low self-esteem and shame regarding differences.

    Table of Contents

    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
    LIST OF TABLES
    LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

    Chapter
    1. INTRODUCTION
        Controversial Definitions of and Processes
        Conflicting Approaches to Theory Development
        Theoretical Frameworks for this Study
        Self and Ethnic Identity Development
    2. METHOD
        Participants
        Recruitment and Data Collection Procedures
        Instruments
    3. RESULTS
        Descriptive Statistics
        Association Among Variables
        Hypotheses Tests
        Exploratory Analyses
    4. DISCUSSION
    5. CONCLUSIONS

    APPENDICES
    REFERENCES

    List of Tables

    1. Theoretical CH Domain Criteria
    2. Risk Factors for the Development of Cultural Homelessness
    3. Hypothesized Consequences of Multicultural Experiences
    4. Sample’s Demographic Characteristics
    5. Sample’s Racial, Ethnic, & Cultural Characteristics
    6. CHRiF Items by Systems Model Levels
    7. Conceptually Derived CH Criteria Items
    8. Domains Measured by the ICME Scales
    9. Multicultural Variables Means & S.D.
    10. CHRiF Scores: Means, S.D., & Interlevel Correlations
    11. Theoretical vs Empirical CH Domain Criteria
    12. Theoretically vs. Empirically Derived Items and Domains
    13. Factored Item’s Loadings, Interitem Correlations, and Reliabilities
    14. CH Criteria, Risk Factors, ICME, & MC Distributions
    15. Correlations: CH, Risk Factors, ICME, and MC Variables

    List of Illustrations

    1. Conceptual Categorization by Ethnic Group Preference and Acculturation
    2. Categorization by Parental Race and Ethnicity
    3. Categorization by Family and Socio-Cultural Environment
    4. General Systems Model of Communication
    5. General Systems Model: Top-Down View
    6. Marcia’s Ego Identity Status Model

    Read the entire thesis here.

  • Founding Chestnut Ridge: The Origins of Central West Virginia’s Multiracial Community

    The Ohio State University
    Department of History
    Project Advisor: Randolph Roth, Professor of History and Sociology
    March 2010
    140 pages

    Alexandra Finley
    The Ohio State University

    Senior Honors Thesis Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for graduation with research distinction in History in the undergraduate colleges of The Ohio State University

    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgements

    Introduction: The “Guineas” of West Virginia
    I. Race and the Male Brothers
    II. The Legend of Sam Norris
    III. The Life of Gustavus Croston
    IV. Henry Dalton’s Fate
    V. The Chestnut Ridge People

    Appendix A: Associated Surnames and Variant Spellings
    Appendix B: Related Genealogies
    Appendix C: The Legend of Sam Norris
    Appendix D: The Writings of Bill Peat Norris
    Appendix E: Associated Families
    Appendix F: Maps
    Bibliography

    Introduction: “A Clan of Partly Colored People:” The “Guineas” of West Virginia

    For visitors to Philippi, West Virginia, the name Chestnut Ridge Road carries no significance. There is nothing to distinguish it from Main Street or Walnut Street in the minds of strangers to that small mountain town. For the people of Barbour County, however, Chestnut Ridge carries a connotation that few guests to the area can understand. Natives of the region recognize Chestnut Ridge Road, Kennedy Road, Croston School Road, and Norris Ridge Road as distinct from the rest of Philippi, home to the “Chestnut Ridge People,” the multiracial descendants of early European pioneers, free African Americans, and Native Americans.

    Before the ancestors of the Chestnut Ridge People had been defined by the white community as a distinct outside group, they were individual settlers who, like frontier residents of European descent, had migrated westward in hopes of a better life. What set these men and women apart was their racial background. Some, like Henry Dalton, moved west after completing indentures that had resulted from their illegitimate “mulatto” birth. Others, like Hugh Kennedy, were descendents of multigenerational multiracial families that could be traced back to the seventeenth century. One, Wilmore Male, was an Englishman who chose to live as man and wife with his slave, Nancy.

    These multiracial families’ difference from the white community gave them a shared experience. The Males and the Daltons quickly intermarried, the free black Hill family taught Henry Dalton’s children the trade of stonemasonry, and each ancestor of the Chestnut Ridge People provided support for others in the same position as themselves. The ties they created survived into the twentieth century.

    Though they maintained close relationships among themselves, the ancestors of the Chestnut Ridge People did not live in an entirely insular community. Many individuals formed friendships with their white neighbors and partook in the activities of the white community. Their race was not an impediment to accumulating real estate or personal property. Nor did race prevent many from gaining respect in the wider community, especially as several of the men were Revolutionary War veterans.

    Given the background of these first multiracial settlers and the levels of success experienced by many, several questions arise. How were people of mixed race treated on the frontier? Did their experience differ from that of the free black community that remained part of the Atlantic world? How was race defined on the frontier, especially in the case of individuals whose racial background was considered ambiguous? Were all of the restrictions placed on free blacks by lawmakers in the eastern half of the state enforced as stringently in the western half?

    The available literature of the Chestnut Ridge community does little to address these questions. Most of what has been written on the group concerns only genealogy and fails to place individuals in a historical context. Almost all of this genealogical work avoids the issue of African heritage and, if it is addressed at all, denies such ancestry in favor of a solely Native American and European background. Additionally, the foundation of most genealogical accounts is community legend rather than historic documentation.

    With the notable exception of Avery F. Gaskins, writers from other disciplines such as sociology who have dealt with the Chestnut Ridge People have also focused on legend rather than historical fact. John Burnell, for instance, examined in the 1950s the contemporary status of the group and touched upon speculations about their history without considering the issue in detail. When the community appeared in surveys like Brewton Berry’s that considered multiple multiracial groups in the United States, it was generally given little attention in comparison to better-known multiracial groups such as the Melungeons. Gaskins is the only researcher who has addressed the historical origins of the Chestnut Ridge People in detail.

    Within the next five chapters, I will continue Gaskins’s work decoding the true history of the group. I aim to provide a comprehensive history of the Chestnut Ridge community into the nineteenth century and place the experiences of the first multiracial settlers to the area in a historical context. The lives of the Chestnut Ridge People’s ancestors cannot be considered outside of the era and location in which they existed or the prevailing racial attitudes that they encountered in the world around them. Considered together, the story of these multiracial settlers highlights the unique experiences of frontier life and the ways in which everyday interaction between whites and blacks could defy the standards for race relations set by lawmakers…

    Read the entire paper here.

  • The Long Shadow of the Civil War: Southern Dissent and Its Legacies [Review by Paul D. Escott]

    H-Net Reviews
    May, 2010
    3 pages

    Paul D. Escott, Reynolds Professor of History
    Wake Forest University

    “Few histories,” writes Victoria Bynum, “are buried faster or deeper than those of political and social dissenters” (p. 148). The Long Shadow of the Civil War disinters a number of remarkable dissenters in North Carolina, Mississippi, and Texas. It introduces the reader to stubbornly independent and courageous Southerners in the North Carolina Piedmont, the Mississippi Piney Woods, and the Big Thicket region around Hardin County, Texas. These individuals and family groups were willing to challenge their society’s coercive social conventions on race, class, and gender. They resisted the established powers when dissent was not only unpopular but dangerous–during the Civil War and the following decades of white supremacy and repressive dominance by the Democratic Party. Their histories remind us of two important truths: that the South was never as monolithic as its rulers and many followers tried to make it; and that human beings, though generally dependent on social approval and acceptance by their peers, are capable of courageous, independent, dissenting lives…

    …In nearby Orange County, North Carolina, there was “a lively interracial subculture” whose members “exchanged goods and engaged in gambling, drinking, and sexual and social intercourse” (p. 9). During the war these poor folks, who had come together despite “societal taboos and economic barriers,” supported themselves and aided resistance to the Confederacy by stealing goods and trading with deserters. During Reconstruction elite white men, who felt that their political and economic dominance was threatened along with their power over their wives and households, turned to violence to reestablish control. Yet interracial family groups among the poor challenged their mistreatment and contributed to “a fragile biracial political coalition” (pp. 55-56) that made the Republican Party dominant before relentless attacks from the Ku Klux Klan nullified the people’s will…

    …Professor Bynum closes her book with a chapter on the interracial offspring of Newt and Rachel Knight. Called “white Negroes” or “Knight’s Negroes” by their neighbors, these individuals continued to exhibit an independent spirit as they dealt with their society and with each other. They chose to identify themselves in a variety of ways; different members of the family adopted different approaches to life. Some passed as white, others affirmed their African American identity, and still others saw themselves as people of color but kept a distance from those whom society defined as Negroes. Within the family group there were many independent spirits. One woman, the ascetic Anna Knight, forged a long and energetic career as an educator and Seventh-Day Adventist missionary…

    Read the entire review here.