Mixed Race Studies

Scholarly perspectives on the mixed race experience.

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recent posts

  • 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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  • “My skin tone challenges the notion of being Black in America and what that carries.”

    2022-02-13

    [Kelly] Curtis is biracial. “My skin tone challenges the notion of being Black in America and what that carries,” she added.

    She knows when the world sees her, people may not view her as someone who fits their preconceived notion of a skeleton athlete, an Olympian or a Black woman.

    “I’m either not Black enough (an actual thing a teammate has said), or I need to speak on behalf of all Black Americans,” she said.

    All of that debate is “exhausting,” Curtis added. So she has decided to just focus on what lies ahead for herself, and for anyone else who wants to see what this “crazy” sport is all about.

    Jaclyn Diaz, “Meet the first Black skeleton athlete to compete for the U.S. at the Olympics,” National Public Radio, February 10, 2022. https://www.npr.org/2022/02/10/1079798400/kelly-curtis-first-black-skeleton-olympian.

  • 2022 CMRS Conference Is Two Weeks Away!

    2022-02-13

    2022 CMRS Conference Is Two Weeks Away!

    Critical Mixed Race Studies Association
    2022-01-24

    *** View the program schedule here! ***

    REGISTER NOW!
    It is not too late to register for the 6th biennial Critical Mixed Race Studies Conference titled Ancestral Futurisms: Embodying Multiracialities Past, Present, and Future to be held virtually February 24-26, 2022. To register, click here.

    BECOME AN EXHIBITOR
    For a small $10 fee you can advertise your business and/or sell your wares during the CMRS Conference in our virtual exhibitor space. Register here.

    BECOME A CONFERENCE SPONSOR
    It’s not too late to become a 2022 CMRS conference sponsor. Sponsors receive advertisement on the conference website, free registration for students or community members, and conference merchandise featuring the brilliant art image “Transition” by artivist Favianna Rodriguez.

    To become a sponsor please go to our Eventbrite page here.

    NEW! View the program guide here.

  • Meet the first Black skeleton athlete to compete for the U.S. at the Olympics

    2022-02-13

    Meet the first Black skeleton athlete to compete for the U.S. at the Olympics

    National Public Radio
    2022-02-10

    Jaclyn Diaz, Reporter

    Kelly Curtis stands next to the Olympic rings. She’s competing in the skeleton competition at the Beijing Olympics.
    IBSF

    BEIJING — Skeleton is a heart-racing, adrenaline-fueled event where a single racer flies face-first down a frozen track, sometimes going more than 80 mph, belly-down on a sled.

    Kelly Curtis is quick to acknowledge this sport is “crazy.” That doesn’t make her love it any less.

    The event has been a mainstay at the Winter Games since 2002. At the Beijing Winter Olympics, just three Americans will compete for a medal — and Curtis is one of them.

    As soon as Curtis shot herself down a topsy-turvy track in Beijing on Friday, she made history.

    Curtis is the first Black athlete, man or woman, to represent the U.S. at the Olympics in skeleton. The 33-year-old is also the only member of the U.S. Air Force at this year’s Winter Games.

    Curtis joins a small group of Black athletes competing for the U.S. at the Beijing Olympics…

    Read the entire article here.

  • On Being Other: Primadonna 2021

    2022-02-13

    On Being Other: Primadonna 2021

    Primadonna Festival
    2022-02-11

    Join writer and journalist Bee Rowlatt as she introduces this year’s Costa winner Monique Roffey, author of the remarkable novel The Mermaid of Black Conch, and Natalie Morris, whose debut title Mixed/Other came out in 2021. Together they explore shared themes of otherness, outsider

  • Born in Atlanta in 1893, White was defined as Black by Southern laws and customs. Yet his enslaved forebears were raped by white owners, making him, according to family history, a great-grandson of William Henry Harrison. With fair skin, blue eyes and blond hair, he could easily have passed as white and ensured himself a better life.

    2022-02-13

    The double life of the title [White Lies: The Double Life of Walter F. White and America’s Darkest Secret] plays out several ways. Born in Atlanta in 1893, [Walter] White was defined as Black by Southern laws and customs. Yet his enslaved forebears were raped by white owners, making him, according to family history, a great-grandson of William Henry Harrison. With fair skin, blue eyes and blond hair, he could easily have passed as white and ensured himself a better life.

    Instead, White worked doggedly to force change. [A. J.] Baime depicts him as a superhero with a secret identity. In the 1920s he lived in Harlem as a Black man, taking on a crucial role in the fledgling NAACP while also fostering the Harlem Renaissance by nurturing Black artists like Langston Hughes, Claude McKay and Zora Neale Hurston. He invited them to his high-profile parties, introduced them to white publishers like Mark Van Doren and Alfred Knopf. (His own books were also well received.)

    Stuart Miller, “He risked his life to become a founding father of civil rights. Why was he forgotten?” The Los Angeles Times, February 9, 2022. https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/books/story/2022-02-09/walter-f-white-a-founder-of-civil-rights-white-lies-biography.

  • Introducing… Monique Roffey

    2022-02-13

    Introducing… Monique Roffey

    FMcM Associates
    London, United Kingdom
    2020-10-15

    Robert Greer

    ‘Introducing…’ is our online interview series to introduce you to some of the amazing authors we’re working with and their brilliant books!

    Monique Roffey is an award-winning Trinidadian-born British writer of novels, essays, a memoir and literary journalism. Her novels have been translated into five languages and shortlisted for several major awards and, in 2013, Archipelago won the OCM BOCAS Award for Caribbean Literature. With the Kisses of His Mouth and The Tryst are works which examine female sexuality and desire. Her essays have appeared in The New York Review of Books, Boundless magazine, The Independent, Wasafiri, and Caribbean Quarterly. She is a Senior Lecturer in Creative Writing at Manchester Metropolitan University.

    Welcome! To start with, could you tell us a little bit about yourself…

    I’m a bi-national writer based in East London. My identity is mixed and fluid in that I was born in Port of Spain, (a city I frequently return to), but I’m also half English. Via my mother, I have Italian, Maltese and Middle Eastern blood. My consciousness, though, has been shaped by my knowledge and understanding of the Caribbean region. Four of my seven books have been set in the Caribbean region. Two of my books have dealt directly with female sexuality and desire. I’d call myself a magical realist as a writer and a practicing Buddhist in my everyday life; everything else is for others to decide. I teach creative writing on the MA/MFA at Manchester Metropolitan University and for the National Writers Centre. I’ve always enjoyed teaching and know, for sure, that the craft of writing can be taught to anyone with a feel for language and an active imagination…

    Read the entire interview here.

  • Belle de Costa Greene: Library Director, Advocate, and Rare Books Expert.

    2022-02-13

    Belle de Costa Greene: Library Director, Advocate, and Rare Books Expert.

    Headlines & Heroes: Newspapers, Comics, & More Fine Print
    Library of Congress
    Washington, D.C.
    2022-02-08

    Joanna Colclough, Reference Librarian
    Serial and Government Publications Division

    Belle de Costa Greene, Oct. 1, 1929. Photograph by Bain News Service. George Grantham Bain Collection, Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.

    In 1999, biographer Jean Strouse published her work on J. P. Morgan, railroad magnate, financier, and New York millionaire of the late 1800s. Of course, Belle de Costa Greene is featured in the book – she worked closely with Morgan for the last 8 years of his life as his personal librarian, managing his private art and rare book collection. Greene’s name was not unknown to history. The first half of the 20th century saw Greene rise as a top expert in the rare book world as librarian and first director of the Morgan Library and Museum. But Strouse discovered something new about Greene that presented Greene in whole new light. In an article for The New Yorker (March 29, 1999, p. 66-79), Strouse tells how she located Greene’s birth certificate in Washington, D.C. which was marked with a C for “colored.”

    Greene passed as white for her entire professional life. This is a fact both surprising and not – surprising that such a secret could be so well-kept and not surprising considering the prejudice of society…

    Read the entire article here.

  • Preparing for Higher Education’s Mixed Race Future: Why Multiraciality Matters

    2022-02-13

    Preparing for Higher Education’s Mixed Race Future: Why Multiraciality Matters

    Palgrave Macmillan
    2022-02-09
    237 pages
    5.83(w) x 8.27(h) x (d)
    Hardcover ISBN: 9783030888206
    eBook ISBN: ISBN: 978-3-030-88821-3

    Edited by:

    Marc P. Johnston-Guerrero, Associate Chair of the Department of Educational Studies; Associate Professor in the Higher Education and Student Affairs
    Ohio State University

    Lisa Delacruz Combs, Ph.D. Candidate
    The Ohio State University

    Victoria K. Malaney-Brown, Director of Academic Integrity
    Columbia University

    • Traces a multiracial trajectory to and through higher education – from pre-college adolescents to post-tenure faculty
    • Complicates common constructs within higher education by examining them through a mixed race lens
    • Critically advances multiraciality in alignment with larger anti-racist and social justice efforts

    Increasing attention and representation of multiraciality in both the scholarly literature and popular culture warrants further nuancing of what is understood about multiracial people, particularly in the changing contexts of higher education. This book offers a way of Preparing Higher Education for its Mixed Race Future by examining Why Multiraciality Matters. In preparation, the book highlights recent contributions in scholarship – both empirical studies and scholarly syntheses – on multiracial students, staff, and faculty/scholars across three separate yet interrelated parts, which will help spur the continued evolution of multiraciality into the future.

    Table of Contents

    • Section I: Foundations of Multiracial Difference
      • Chapter 1. Coming of Age: Why Multiracial Adolescence Matters for Higher Education
      • Chapter 2. College Enrollment and Multiracial Backgrounds: An Exploration of Access and Choice
      • Chapter 3. Operationalizing Multiracial Consciousness: Disrupting Monoracism at a Historically White Institution
    • Section II: Complex Identities Nuancing Multiraciality
      • Chapter 4. The “Hot Ho” and the Unwanted, Colored Male: Gendered Multiracial Subjectivities Hailed through Contemporary Racial Discourse
      • Chapter 5. In Pursuit of a Leadership Identity: Exploring the Role of Involvement in Cultivating a Multiracial Identity at a Hispanic Serving Institution
      • Chapter 6. The Complexity of Black Biracial Identity within the Contexts of Peer and Student Service Interactions at a Predominately White Institution
      • Chapter 7. I am Black and …: Complexities of Being a Marginalized Multiracial Higher Education Professional in Times of Heightened Racial Tensions
      • Chapter 8. Are We Enough? Exploring Multiracial Staff Identities through the Narratives of Mixed Filipinx Americans
    • Section III: Nuancing Multiracial Engagement and Outcomes
      • Chapter 9. Sense of Belonging for Multiracial and Multiethnic College Students
      • Chapter 10. “Campus Feels Different to Me”: Comparing Climate Experiences of White vs. Non-White Multiracial College Students
      • Chapter 11. Damned If You Do, Damned If You Don’t: The Trials and Tribulations of Multiracial Student Activism
      • Chapter 12. Pedestaled or Pigeonholed? Multiracial Scholars Traversing Monoracial Academia
      • Chapter 13. Conclusion: What Difference Does Multiraciality Make? Reflections and Future Directions
  • ‘In trying to enthuse the students, I definitely enthused myself’

    2022-02-13

    ‘In trying to enthuse the students, I definitely enthused myself’

    Islington Tribune
    London, United Kingdom
    2022-02-10

    Anna Lamche, Reporter


    Hannah Lowe

    The recipient of the Costa book of the year for The Kids, Hannah Lowe may have just about achieved her goal, learns Anna Lamche

    TRACKING down a physical copy of Hannah Lowe’s The Kids has been difficult since the poet won the Costa Book Award last week, a fact she attributes more to a “national shortage of paper” than to her publisher’s surprise at her unexpected win.

    Hannah won the prestigious prize last Tuesday for her book of sonnets, a beautiful and haunting ode to teaching and childhood. Her collection reflects on the junctures between education and the superstructures of history, class and race – the result is a tightly rendered meditation on human experience, spanning birth to death and grief to laughter, often within a matter of lines…

    …Born to a “half Jamaican, half Chinese” father, Hannah’s own experience – she recalls being called “white wog” at school in one poem – allows her to relate to the alienation of her own black and diasporan students in the wake of the 7/7 bombings and beyond. The Kids continually demands we consider “the stakes when teachers rarely look like those/they teach”….

    Read the entire article here.

  • Abraham Galloway is the Black figure from the Civil War you should know about

    2022-02-13

    Abraham Galloway is the Black figure from the Civil War you should know about

    All Things Considered
    National Public Radio
    2022-02-08

    Elizabeth Blair, Senior Producer/Reporter, Arts Desk

    Engraved portrait of Abraham Galloway from William Still’s The Underground Railroad, published in 1872.
    William Still’s ‘The Underground Railroad,’ 1872

    He has been compared to James Bond and Malcolm X, though his name has largely been left out of the history books.

    Abraham Galloway was an African American who escaped enslavement in North Carolina, became a Union spy during the Civil War and recruited Black soldiers to fight with the North. That’s the short version. The fuller picture would include his work as a revolutionary and being one of the first African Americans elected to the North Carolina Senate.

    David Cecelski, author of The Fire of Freedom: Abraham Galloway and the Slaves’ Civil War, calls him a “swashbuckling figure who wouldn’t take sass from Northern or Southern or Black or white, Union or Confederate.”

    When Cecelski was doing research for another book about maritime slavery, he kept coming across Galloway’s name. “And the stories were sort of so different than what I had been taught about slavery or the Civil War, or the role of African Americans in the Civil War,” he says…

    Read or listen to the story (00:05:07) here.

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