Mixed Race Studies

Scholarly perspectives on the mixed race experience.

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  • The Routledge International Handbook of Interracial and Intercultural Relationships and Mental Health
  • Loving Across Racial and Cultural Boundaries: Interracial and Intercultural Relationships and Mental Health Conference
  • Call for Proposals: 2026 Critical Mixed Race Studies Conference at UCLA
  • Participants Needed for a Paid Research Study: Up to $100
  • You were either Black or white. To claim whiteness as a mixed child was to deny and hide Blackness. Our families understood that the world we were growing into would seek to denigrate this part of us and we would need a community that was made up, always and already, of all shades of Blackness.

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  • More Than Black? Multiracial Identity and the New Racial Order [Book Review: Christian]

    2010-07-31

    More Than Black? Multiracial Identity and the New Racial Order [Book Review: Christian]

    The Western Journal of Black Studies
    Volume 27, Number 4 (2003)
    pages 279-280

    Mark Christian, Professor & Chair of African & African American Studies
    Lehman College, City University of New York

    This book comes out the school of thought that advocates for the “multiracial identity” classification in the US. More Than Black? Multiracial Identity and the New Racial Order offers a postmodern analysis of “race” and issues a call for the acknowledgement of what can be deemed the multifaceted racialized heritages of many Black peoples located in the African Diaspora. In this sense the book offers little other than what is largely akeady known. Indeed many peoples of African descent do have claim to other heritages. For example it is broadly accepted now that at least two-thirds of African Americans have some Native American and European heritage. However, it is erroneous to run away with this idea as if it is the sole criteria for establishing a “new racial order” based on what is in fact unlikely to have any impact on white supremacy and its continued dominance over the socially constructed “peoples of color.”…

    Read or purchase the book review here.

  • Race and Multiraciality in Brazil and the United States: Converging Paths? By G. Reginald Daniel. [Book Review]

    2010-07-31

    Race and Multiraciality in Brazil and the United States: Converging Paths? By G. Reginald Daniel. [Book Review]

    Ethnic and Racial Studies
    Volume 30, Number 6 (November 2007)
    pages 1167-1181

    Antonio Sérgio Alfredo Guimarães
    Department of Sociology, University of Sao Paulo

    In his recent comparative study G. Reginald Daniel looks at the convergence in race relations patterns between Brazil and the US with a reasonable amount of historical information extracted from an extensive literature, yet adds almost no empirical research. His narrative takes a descriptive, reading-notes-like mode as he passes over both countries’ history from colonial times to the present, following too closely different authors’ arguments. His metanarrative, the one that ties together his diverse sources, is a Gramscian–Marxist theory of hegemony and race formation borrowed mainly from Omi and Winant (1986), and Hanchard (1994)…

    Read or purchase the article here.

  • Is there ‘a’ mixed race group in Britain? The diversity of multiracial identification and experience

    2010-07-29

    Is there ‘a’ mixed race group in Britain? The diversity of multiracial identification and experience

    Critical Social Policy
    Volume 30, Number 3 (August 2010)
    pages 337-358
    DOI: 10.1177/0261018310367672

    Miri Song, Professor of Sociology
    University of Kent

    In contemporary British society, references to ‘mixed race’ people and to various forms of mixing abound. But to what extent can we say that there is ‘a’ mixed race group in Britain today? If such a group exists, what commonalities underlie the experience of being mixed? In addressing this question, I draw on a study of the racial identifications of different types of mixed young people in Britain. I find that the meanings and significance of race and mixedness in these young people’s lives can vary considerably both across and within specific mixed groups. In conclusion, I argue that while there is evidence of a growing consciousness and interest in being mixed, we cannot (yet) speak of a coherent mixed group or experience in Britain.

    Read or purchase the article here.

  • Black, White and Other… Worldwide

    2010-07-29

    Black, White and Other… Worldwide

    The Huffington Post
    2010-07-27

    Marcia Alesan Dawkins, Visiting Scholar
    Brown University

    Even though the 21st century is seeing an exponential increase in reports of multiracial ancestry worldwide, exactly what makes a person multiracial remains a puzzling concept. According to the Association of Multiethnic Americans and Project RACE, the definition of a multiracial/interracial person is either someone whose parents were of more than one race or racial background, or someone who had parents that were of different racial groups. But what about those who identify with more than one racial background, irrespective of their parents’ identities? Or, those who identify with a racial background completely different from those of their parents?

    Case in point: Nmachi Ihegboro, a blond haired and blue-eyed white baby born earlier this month to proud black Nigerian parents Ben and Angela Ihegboro in London UK. Nmachi’s parents are somewhat mystified about how they could create a white child and they are not the only ones. According to the New York Post, genetics experts are also baffled. So far they have offered three theories: (1) Nmachi “is the result of a gene mutation unique to her. If that is the case, Nmachi would pass the gene to her children — and they, too, would likely be white. (2) She’s the product of long-dormant white genes… that might have been carried by” her ancestors “for generations without surfacing until now.” Genetics professor Sykes of Oxford University thinks that some form of mixed race ancestry would seem to be necessary, and notes that sometimes multiracial women can carry some genetic material for white children and some genetic material for black children. It is also conceivable that the same holds true for multiracial men. (3) “While doctors have said Nmachi is not an outright albino, or lacking in all pigment, they added that the child may have some kind of mutated version of the genetic condition — and that her skin could darken over time.”…

    Read the entire article here.

  • More than a Metaphor: Blood as Boundary for Korean Biracial Identity

    2010-07-28

    More than a Metaphor: Blood as Boundary for Korean Biracial Identity

    NCA 95th Annual Convention
    Chicago Hilton & Towers
    Chicago, Illinois
    2009-11-11

    Myra Washington
    College of Media, Institute of Communications Research
    University of Illinois

    When Hines Ward was named MVP of Super Bowl XL, his Black and Korean biracial status became the touchstone for conversations about mixed-race people in Korea. His “homecoming” trip generated a frenzied discourse around the limits of Korean identity and the location of bi/multiracial individuals within it. Ward’s racial representation allows for the analysis of nationhood, citizenship, difference and race as imagined through blood metaphors.

    Read the entire paper here.

  • Black and White, or Shades of Gray? Racial Labeling of Barack Obama Predicts Implicit Race Perception

    2010-07-27

    Black and White, or Shades of Gray? Racial Labeling of Barack Obama Predicts Implicit Race Perception

    Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy
    Volume 10, Issue 1 (December 2010)
    pages 207–222
    DOI: 10.1111/j.1530-2415.2010.01213.x

    Lori Wu Malahy
    University of Washington

    Mara Sedlins
    University of Washington

    Jason Plaks, Associate Professor of Psychology
    University of Toronto

    Yuichi Shoda, Professor of Psychology
    University of Washington

    The present research capitalized on the prominence and multiracial heritage of U.S. 2008 presidential election candidate Barack Obama to examine whether individual differences in classifying him as Black or as multiracial corresponded to differences in implicit perception of race. This research used a newly developed task (Sedlins, Malahy, & Shoda, 2010) with digitally morphed mixed-race faces to assess implicit race perception. Participants completed this task four times before and one time after the election. We found that people who labeled Obama as Black implicitly perceived race as more categorical than those who labeled Obama as multiracial. This finding adds to the growing literature on multiracial perception by demonstrating a relationship between the explicit use of multiracial and monoracial race classification and implicit race perception. The results suggest potential implications for governmental, educational, and judiciary usage of racial categories.

    Read or purchase the article here.

  • Fluidity without Postmodernism: Michelle Cliff and the “Tragic Mulatta” Tradition

    2010-07-27

    Fluidity without Postmodernism: Michelle Cliff and the “Tragic Mulatta” Tradition

    African American Review
    Vol. 32, No. 4 (Winter, 1998)
    pages 673-689

    Suzanne Bost, Associate Professor of English
    Loyola University

    I am writing the story of my life as a statue… I wish they had carved me from the onyx of Elizabeth Catlett.  Or molded me from the dark clay of Augusta Savage.  Or cut me from mahogany or cast me in bronze.  I wish I were dark plaster like Meta Warrick Fuller’s Talking Skull.  But I appear more as Edmonia Lewis’s Hagar—wringing her hands in the wilderness—white marble figure of no homeland—her striations caught within.  (Cliff, Land 85)

    In “The Laughing Mulatto (Formerly a Statue) Speaks,” Michelle Cliff invokes past stereotypes of the mulatto and the sculptors who remolded them. From Edmonia Lewis (1844-1909)—the half-black, half-Chippewasculpor who gained international fame with the help of abolitionists William Lloyd Garrison and Lydia Maria Child—to Augusta Savage (1892-1962)—the Harlem Renaissance artists who sculpted busts of W. E. B. Du Bois, Frederick Douglass, and Marcus Garvey—black artists have been reconstructing images of African Americans.  The speaker of “The Laughing Mulatto” identifies with racial “betweeenness,” yet she also subverts racist conventions that privilege the whiteness within biracial African Americans. She wishes that her skin were darker: onyx, mahogany, or bronze, not white marble (Cliff, Land 85).  Her wish implicitly compares race to workable materials, as if racial identity were something that could be chiseled and molded by an artist…

    Read or purchase the article here.

  • Endogenous Race in Brazil: Affirmative Action and the Construction of Racial Identity among Young Adults

    2010-07-26

    Endogenous Race in Brazil: Affirmative Action and the Construction of Racial Identity among Young Adults

    Working Paper
    2010-01-10

    Andrew M. Francis, Professor of Economics
    Emory University

    Maria Tannuri-Pianto, Professor of Economics
    University of Brasilia

    Brazil is not only characterized by racial diversity but also by socioeconomic inequality. This complexity, plus the recent adoption of racial quotas by a handful of universities, makes Brazil an ideal place to study the construction of racial identity. In this paper, we examine applicants and students of the University of Brasilia, which established racial quotas in July 2004 reserving 20% of available admissions slots for students who self-identified as black. Using admissions data as well as a student survey conducted by the authors, we explore the determinants of racial identity, including socioeconomic status, parents’ race, academic performance, and quotas in admissions. We find that, holding skin tone constant, socioeconomic status and academic performance vary inversely with black identity. The evidence suggests that young adults in mixed race families are more likely to identify with their mother’s race than their father’s, and that this pattern relates to gender and father’s absence during childhood. We also find that quotas in university admissions increased the likelihood that applicants and students self-identified as non-white, and that this phenomenon was attributable, in part, to actual change in racial identity.

    Read the entire paper here.

  • Racial Self-Categorization in Adolescence: Multiracial Development and Social Pathways

    2010-07-26

    Racial Self-Categorization in Adolescence: Multiracial Development and Social Pathways

    Child Development
    Volume 77, Number 5
    , September/October 2006
    Pages 1298–1308
    DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2006.00935.x

    Steven Hitlin, Assistant Professor of Sociology
    University of Iowa

    J. Scott Brown, Associate Professor of Gerontology, Scripps Research Fellow
    Miami University, Oxford, Ohio

    Glen H. Elder, Jr.
    Carolina Population Center
    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

    Research on multiracial individuals is often cross-sectional, obscuring the fluid nature of multiracial selfcategorization across time. Pathways of racial self-identification are developed from a nationally representative sample of adolescents aged 14 – 18, measured again 5 years later. A significant proportion of multiracial adolescents change racial self-identification across time. Youth who ever report being multiracial are 4 times as likely to switch self-identification as to report consistent multiracial identities. Across this time, more multiracial adolescents either add a racial category (diversify) or subtract one (consolidate) than maintain consistent multiracial self-categorization. Exploratory multinomial analyses show few differences between these pathways on select psychological and social characteristics. Results lend quantitative support to qualitative studies  indicating the fluidity of racial self-categorization.

    Read the entire article here.

  • Segregation of the Free People of Color and the Construction of Race in Antebellum New Orleans

    2010-07-26

    Segregation of the Free People of Color and the Construction of Race in Antebellum New Orleans

    Southeastern Geographer
    Volume 48, Number 1, May 2008
    pages 19-37
    E-ISSN: 1549-6929
    Print ISSN: 0038-366X
    DOI: 10.1353/sgo.0.0010

    Amy R. Sumpter, Instructor of Geography
    Georgia College and State University

    Louisiana and the city of New Orleans have a complicated colonial and racial history. A large free population of color living amidst enslaved people of color attests to fluidity in racial constructions present in the colonial period in Louisiana. Throughout the French (1682–1763) and Spanish (1763–1803) colonial periods and the first five decades of U.S. statehood (1803–1850), racial constructions changed remarkably. Cultural conflict, an increasing number of American whites, and fear of insurrection contributed to growing hostility toward the free people of color and remaining colonial racial practices. Historical evidence, state and municipal legislation, and 1850 U.S. Census data show that free people of color tended to reside in specific “Creole” areas within the city, demonstrating that free people in the city were segregated by race.

    Read or purchase the article here.

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