• Race and Justice in Transnational Perspective: “Colorblind?: The Contradictions of Racial Classification”

    Seminar Series: Race and Justice in Transnational Perspective
    University of California, Merced
    California Room
    5200 North Lake Rd.
    Merced, California 95343
    2013-09-19, 10:30 PDT (Local Time)

    Michael Omi, Associate Professor of Ethnic Studies
    University of California, Berkeley

    The dominant racial ideology of colorblindness in the United States holds that the most effective anti-racist policy, and practice, is to ignore race. Issues continue to arise, however, that present a set of contradictions for colorblind ideology by “noticing” race. On-going debates about racial data collection by the state and the “rebiologization” of race in biomedical research and DNA sampling illustrate, in different ways, the inherently problematic character of racial classification.

    Michael Omi is associate professor of Ethnic Studies and the associate director of the Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society (HIFIS) at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the co-author of Racial Formation in the United States, a groundbreaking work that transformed how we understand the social and historical forces that give race its changing meaning over time and place. Professor Omi’s research interests include racial theory and politics, racial/ethnic classification and the census, Asians Americans and racial stratification, and racist and anti-racist social movements. He is a recipient of UC Berkeley’s Distinguished Teaching Award—an honor bestowed on only 240 Berkeley faculty members since the award’s inception in 1959.

    The seminar series “Race and Justice in Transnational Perspective” is organized by Tanya Golash-Boza, Nigel Hatton, and David Torres-Rouff. The event is co-sponsored by the UC Center for New Racial Studies, Sociology, and SSHA.

    For more information, click here.

  • A Black Confederate General That We Can All Embrace?

    Civil War Memory: Reflections of a High School History Teacher & Civil War Historian
    2011-03-17

    Kevin M. Levin, Instructor of American History
    Gann Academy, Waltham, Massachusetts

    I trust that after this post no one will accuse me of dismissing any and all evidence for the existence of black Confederate soldiers.  Better yet, I give you at least one black Confederate general.  The interesting question is whether the Sons of Confederate Veterans and others will accept him as one of their own…

    Read the entire article here.

  • “Japanese in the Samba”: Japanese Brazilian Musical Citizenship, Racial Consciousness, and Transnational Migration

    University of Pittsburgh
    2008
    213 pages

    Shanna Lorenz, Assistant Professor of Music
    Occidental College, Los Angeles, California

    Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of Arts and Sciences in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy

    his doctoral dissertation is an ethnographic study of musical culture among Japanese Brazilians in São Paulo, Brazil. Specifically, the study explores how the musical culture of this community has changed in recent years as a result of the dekasegui movement, the migration of hundreds of thousands of Japanese Brazilians who have traveled to Japan since 1990 in search of work. In order to explore these questions, I conducted fieldwork between May and November of 2003 on three musical groups, Zhen Brasil, Ton Ton Mi, and Wadaiko Sho, each of which have found different ways to invoke, contest, and reinvent their Brazilian and Japanese musical heritages. By exploring these groups’ musical practices, texts, dance, costumes, and discourses of self-definition, this study offers insight into shifts in the ethnic self-definition and racial consciousness of the Japanese Brazilian community that have taken place as the result of face-to-face contact between Japanese Brazilians and Japanese under the conditions of contiguous globalization. This study contributes to our current understandings of the impact of circular forms of migration on the musical culture and ethnic identity of diasporic communities in the contemporary world.

    Read the entire dissertation here.

  • Cuban Color Classification and Identity Negotiation: Old Terms in a New World

    University of Pittsburgh
    2004
    246 pages

    Shawn Alfonso Wells

    Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of The University of Pittsburgh in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy

    This thesis analyzes how the Cuban Revolution’s transnational discourse on blackness positively affected social attitudes, allowing color identity to be negotiated using color classification terms previously devalued.

    In the Caribbean and Latin America, most systems of social stratification based on color privilege “whiteness” both socially and culturally; therefore, individuals negotiate their identities with whiteness as the core element to be expressed. This dissertation examines how this paradigm has been overturned in Cuba so that “blackness” is now the featured aspect of identity. This is due in part to the popular response to the government’s rhetoric which engages in an international political discourse of national identity designed to situate Cuba contextually in opposition to the United States in the global politics of color. This shift has occurred in a dialectic environment of continued negative essentialized images of Blacks although blackness itself is now en vogue. The dialogue that exists between state and popular forms of racial categorization serves to recontextualize the meanings of “blackness” and the values attached to it so that color classification terms which indicate blackness are assumed with facility in identity negotiation.

    In the past, the concepts of whitening and mestizaje (race mixture) were employed by the state with the goal of whitening the Cuban population so that Cuba would be perceived as a majority white country. Since the 1959 Revolution, however, the state has publicly claimed that Cuba is an Afro-Latin nation. This pronouncement has resulted in brown/mestizo/mulatto and not white as being the national ideal. The symbolic use of mestizaje in Cuban society and the fluidity inherent in the color classification system leaves space for manipulation from both ends of the color spectrum and permits Cubans from disparate groups to come together under a shared sense of identity. The ideology of the state and the popular perceptions of the symbolism that the mulatto represents were mediated by a color continuum, which in turn was used both by the state and the populace to construct, negotiate, maintain, and manipulate color identities. This study demonstrates that although color classification was not targeted by the government as an agent to convey blackness, it nevertheless does, and the shift in how identity is negotiated using racial categories can be viewed as the response of the populace to the state’s otherwise silent dialogue on “race” and identity.

    TABLE OF CONTENTS

    • Introduction: Mulatas del Caribe
    • Chapter One: The problem of race
      • Problematizing Race
      • Field Setting
      • Conducting Fieldwork in Cuba
      • Methodology
    • Chapter Two: Historical Context of Color Classification in Latin America and the Caribbean
      • History of racial/color categorization in Cuba
      • The Era of Conquest and Colonization
      • The Plantation Era
        • Color classes
        • Pigmentocracy/Whitening
      • The Era of Capitalism
      • The Era of Socialism and Castro
    • Chapter Three: Terms of Classification
      • Settings
        • The Census
        • The Carnet
        • The Medical Establishment
      • Cognitive Categories of Color Classification
      • Features of Classification
      • Constructing Identity
        • Blancos
        • Mestizos, Mulatos and Mestizaje
        • Negros
        • Chinos
    • Chapter Four: The social significance of classification
      • Contested classifications
      • Stereotypes and Social Status
      • Shifts in meaning and preference of terms
    • Chapter Five: Mulatizaje and Cubanidad
      • Mestizaje, Mulattoization and Cubanidad
        • The typical Cuban
      • Claiming Identity and Negotiating Mulatizaje
        • Extended Case Study #1
        • Case study #2
        • Case study #3
        • Case study #4
        • Case study #5
        • Case study #6
        • Case study #7
        • Case study #8
        • Case study #9
        • Case study #10
        • Case study #11
    • Conclusions
    • Appendices
      • Appendix A: Glosses of Color Terms.
      • Appendix B: Census Enumeration of Writs of Freedom
      • Appendix C: Racial Categories of 1827 and 1841 Censuses
      • Appendix D: Census with Conflicting Terminology
    • Bibliography

    LIST OF TABLES

    • Table 1: Chronological Table of Data Collection Techniques
    • Table 2: Census Terms.
    • Table 3: Formal Labels on Documents
    • Table 4: Descriptive Color Terms
    • Table 5: Cognitive Map of Terminology
    • Table 6: Labels of Pilesorting Groups.
    • Table 7: Percentages of Informants Employing Particular Classification Terms
    • Table 8: Johnson’s Hierarchial Clustering.
    • Table 9: Color Continuum.
    • Table 10: Informal Descriptors
    • Table 11: Common Descriptors for Hair Texture
    • Table 12: Common Descriptors for Facial Features.
    • Table 13: Common Modifying Descriptors
    • Table 14: Common Compound Terms
    • Table 15: Descriptive Labels

    Read the entire dissertation here.

  • Addressing Racial/Ethnic Health Disparities Best Practices for Clinical Care and Medical Education in the 21st Century

    University of Texas, Austin
    2013-09-23 through 2013-09-24

    One of the primary goals of the US Department of Health and Human Services, the National Institutes of Health, and many public health programs is the reduction of health disparities in the United States. However, significant racial/ethnic disparities persist in the prevalence of disease, access to medical care, quality of care, and health outcomes for the most common causes of death (including cardiovascular and lung disease, infectious disease, cancer, diabetes, and accidents). At this conference, nationally-recognized speakers will discuss the causes of such disparities and describe new approaches in clinical care and medical education that improve care, achieve better health outcomes, and reduce racial/ethnic health disparities. We will also discuss how these best practices can be incorporated into medical training at the new Dell Medical School at The University of Texas and at other medical schools around the country. One key goal of this conference is to help design a cutting-edge curriculum that will better prepare medical students to meet the challenges and opportunities of 21st century medicine.

    Conference registration is open to anyone interested in attending this event. See the Continuing Medical Education (CME) tab for information regarding continuing education for the September 23rd portion of the conference.

    The second day of the conference (September 24) is open to invited participants only. Discussions and working groups on the second day will focus on developing new pedagogical approaches and innovative learning modules for the pre-clinical curriculum at the Dell Medical School, with the goal of more effectively integrating training on human genomic variation, race/ethnicity, health disparities, and social/environmental determinants of health into the medical curriculum.

    Speakers

    For more information, click here.

  • The Chican@ Hip Hop Nation: Politics of a New Millennial Mestizaje

    Michigan State University Press
    2013-11-01
    310 pages
    6 in x 9 in
    Paperback ISBN: 9781611860863
    eBook ISBN: 9781609173753

    Pancho McFarland, Associate Professor of Sociology
    Chicago State University

    The population of Mexican-origin peoples in the United States is a diverse one, as reflected by age, class, gender, sexuality, and religion. Far from antiquated concepts of mestizaje, recent scholarship has shown that Mexican@/Chican@ culture is a mixture of indigenous, African, and Spanish and other European peoples and cultures. No one reflects this rich blend of cultures better than Chican@ rappers, whose lyrics and iconography can help to deepen our understanding of what it means to be Chican@ or Mexican@ today. While some identify as Mexican mestizos, others identify as indigenous people or base their identities on their class and racial/ethnic makeup. No less significant is the intimate level of contact between Chican@s and black Americans. Via a firm theoretical foundation and a collection of vibrant essays, Pancho McFarland explores the language and ethos of Chican@/Mexican@ hip hop and sheds new light on three distinct identities reflected in the music: indigenous/Mexica, Mexican nationalist/immigrant, and street hopper. With particular attention to the intersection of black and Chicano cultures, the author places exciting recent developments in music forms within the context of progressive social change, social justice, identity, and a new transnational, polycultural America.

    Table of Contents

    • Foreword by Ruben O. Martinez
    • PREFACE
    • ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
    • PART 1. SETTING THE THEORETICAL CONTEXT
      • Chapter 1. Quién es más macho? Quién es más Mexicano?: Chican@ and Mexicans Identities in Rap
      • Chapter 2. Barrio Logos: Tlie Sacred and Profane Word of Chicano Emcees
    • PART 2. IDENTITIES OLD AND NEW
      • Chapter 3. Sonido Indígena: Mexica Hip-Hop and Masculine Identity
      • Chapter 4. Paísas, Compas, Inmigrantes: Mexicanidad in Hip-Hop
      • Chapter 5. Barrio Locos: Street Hop and Amerikan Identity
    • PART 3. MEXICANIDAD, AFRICANIDAD
      • Chapter 6. Multiracial Macho: Kemo the Blaxican’s Hip-Hop Masculinity
      • Chapter 7. The Rap on Chicano/Mexicano and Black Masculinity: Gender and Cross-Cultural Exchange
      • Chapter 8. “Soy la Kalle”: Radio, Reggaetón, and Latin@ Identity
    • PART 4. HIP-HOP AND JUSTICE
      • Chapter 9. Teaching Hip-Hop: A Pedagogy for Social Justice
      • Afterword. Hip-Hop and Freedom-Dreaming in the Mexican Diaspora
    • Appendix. Music Sources
    • NOTES
    • REFERENCES
    • INDEX
  • Creative Media lecturer publishes new book

    Dundalk Institute of Technology
    Dundalk, County Louth, Ireland
    2013-09-02

    Sarah Mc Cann

    Zélie Asava, a lecturer on the BA & BA (Hons) in Video & Film Production has recently had her book—The Black Irish Onscreen: Representing Black and Mixed-Race Identities on Irish Film and Television—published by the Peter Lang Publishing Group

    The book is also the winner of the 2011 Peter Lang Young Scholars Competition in Irish Studies.

    The book examines the position of black and mixed-race characters in Irish film culture. By exploring key film and television productions from the 1990s to the present day, the author uncovers and interrogates concepts of Irish identity, history and nation…

    Read the entire article here.

  • “Not Tainted by the Past”: Re-Constructions and Negotiations of Coloured Identities Among University Coloured Students in Post- Apartheid South Africa

    University of Pittsburgh
    2013
    152 pages

    Sardana Nikolaeva

    The South African coloured identity is a profoundly complex construction that, on the one hand, is interpreted as an ambiguous and ‘in-between’ identity and, on the other hand, its own ambiguity and complexity provides multiple means and strategies of production and articulation within various contexts. This dissertation seeks to examine a production of multiple discourses by post-apartheid coloured youth in order to re-construct and negotiate their identities moving through various social contexts of everyday experiences within diverse university settings. Similarly to other minority and marginalized youth, coloured students produce various discourses and practices as the medium of counter-hegemonic formation and negotiation of their minoritized and marginalized identities. In this sense, coloured students implement produced discourses and practices as instrumental agency to create resistance and challenge the dominant discourses on their marginalized and minoritized identities, simultaneously determining alternate characteristics for the same identities. Turning to the current conceptualizations of coloured identities as heterogeneous, non-static and highly contextual, I analyze two dominant discourses produced by the coloured students: coloured as an ethnic/hybrid cultural identity and an adoption of an inclusive South African national identity, simultaneously rejecting coloured identity as a product of the apartheid social engineering. Additionally, integrating an ecological approach and ecology model of identity development, created and utilized by Renn (1998, 2004) in her work that explores how multiracial students construct their identities in the context of higher education, I develop an ecology model of coloured students’ identity development and present the data to determine what factors and opportunities, provided by microsystems, mesosystem, exosystems and macrosystem of identity development, are significant and how they influence coloured students’ identities production, development and negotiation in and out of the university environments. The dissertation analysis on coloured identities builds on nine months of ethnographic fieldwork in the Western Cape, South Africa, including limited participant observation and semi-structured interviews with the undergraduate and graduate coloured students of the University of the Western Cape and University of Stellenbosch, the Western Cape, South Africa.

    Read the entire dissertation here.

  • Belle: Toronto Review

    The Hollywood Reporter
    2013-09-12

    John DeFore

    The true story of a mixed-race child raised by British aristocrats is lightly fictionalized by Amma Asante.

    TORONTO — Hoping to use some Jane Austen-style courtship anxiety to lend drama to an episode in 18th-century English history that is novel enough on its own, Amma Asante’s Belle centers on Dido Elizabeth Belle, the mixed-race child who was sent to be raised by the second-highest judge in England’s courts. Though the inventions of Misan Sagay’s script emphasize concerns over dowries and social rank that will be grating for many contemporary viewers, extracting little of the humor that Austen regularly found in such hangups, the picture’s sour notes are balanced by fine performances and clear historical appeal. Moviegoers should respond well, if not overwhelmingly, when Fox Searchlight brings it to theaters next spring…

    Read the entire review here.

  • The Changing Face of America

    National Geographic Magazine
    October 2013
    Special 125th Anniversary Issue: The Power of Photography

    Lise Funderburg

    Photography by Martin Schoeller

    Lise Funderburg is the author of Black, White, Other and Pig Candy. When asked, “What are you?” she often describes herself as a woman of some color.

    We’ve become a country where race is no longer so black or white.

    What is it about the faces on these pages that we find so intriguing? Is it simply that their features disrupt our expectations, that we’re not used to seeing those eyes with that hair, that nose above those lips? Our responses can range from the armchair anthropologist’s benign desire to unravel ancestries and find common ground to active revulsion at group boundaries being violated or, in the language of racist days past, “watered down.”

    Out in the world, the more curious (or less polite) among us might approach, asking, “Where are you from?” or “What are you?” We look and wonder because what we see—and our curiosity—speaks volumes about our country’s past, its present, and the promise and peril of its future.

    The U.S. Census Bureau has collected detailed data on multiracial people only since 2000, when it first allowed respondents to check off more than one race, and 6.8 million people chose to do so. Ten years later that number jumped by 32 percent, making it one of the fastest growing categories. The multiple-race option has been lauded as progress by individuals frustrated by the limitations of the racial categories established in the late 18th century by German scientist Johann Friedrich Blumenbach, who divided humans into five “natural varieties” of red, yellow, brown, black, and white. Although the multiple-race option is still rooted in that taxonomy, it introduces the factor of self-determination. It’s a step toward fixing a categorization system that, paradoxically, is both erroneous (since geneticists have demonstrated that race is biologically not a reality) and essential (since living with race and racism is). The tracking of race is used both to enforce antidiscrimination laws and to identify health issues specific to certain populations…

    Read the entire article here. View the photographs here.