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Showing posts with label ethnicity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ethnicity. Show all posts
Monday, January 2, 2012
How to Raise a 'White' Child
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Glenn Robinson (that's me) |
There's a new book by Tiffany Rae Reid about how to raise a 'biracial' child which got me thinking what a book would say about raising a 'mono-racial' child.
Society would label me 'mono-racial' despite the fact that I don't believe in the notion of pure 'races', nor the notion of biological 'races'.
I had to decipher my own identity as an adult.
I was not taught why 'white' became a racialized term; that 'races' were invented to divide humans politically and in turn justify theft of land and resources, and justify slavery and oppression.
I was not taught the difference between 'white' culture and 'white' phenotype; that any phenotype can have 'white' culture; that 'white' culture actually means European culture.
I was not taught to embrace the term European-American. I was not taught to recognize my foreignness in the Americas. I was not taught that I am a guest in the Americas; that I am descended from families of invaders who used their technology (guns) to bully their way and murder their way onto Native American territory.
I was never told that I had the option (or even better - the responsibility) to reject the 'white' label for what I really am, a European American living on Native American land.
===
Glenn is a European-American married to a Mexican-American. They have two children. Glenn is interested in progressive immigration reform, and desegregation within schools and communities. He is a life long learner with interests in sociology, anthropology, psychology, history and politics.
Connect to Glenn at CommunityVillage.us
Labels:
culture,
ethnicity,
European,
European American,
Native,
Native American,
phenotype,
race,
slavery,
theft
Friday, July 15, 2011
Census Long form adds Ethnic details

People wrote in "American" and the census accepted it as a valid answer.
What does "American" mean?
This is from census.gov on page 3.
Also,
Left says "American Indian" 2.8% of population.
Whereas this chart says "American Indian" 0.9% of population. Why the difference? Which one is correct?
Also,
Left says "American Indian" 2.8% of population.
Whereas this chart says "American Indian" 0.9% of population. Why the difference? Which one is correct?
Sunday, July 10, 2011
"Race", Culture, Ethnicity. What's the difference?
biological "race"
vs
socio-political "race"
cultural heritage: the culture that our ancestors gave to us
vs
cultural group: the cultural that we are grouped into now, today
ethnic heritage: the combination of biology and culture from our ancestors
vs
ethnic group: the combination of biology and assimilated culture we have now, today
Why the quotation marks around "race"?
I use quotation marks around the word "race" because there has always been
Scientifically Speaking
cline and haplogroup are broad categories
haplotype, genotype and
The traditional five "races" do not describe the true variety of human kind. Furthermore, grouping people into "races" is dehumanizing and akin to thinking of people as breeds. Even if we are "breeds", mutts and pedigrees, none of us want to think of ourselves in those terms. The outdated concept of biological "race" has lead to racism and colorism, both of which
Why would it be okay to use the scientific words for race?
It makes more sense to use the scientific words because it acknowledges the complexity or our differences without oversimplifying our reality. i.e. the way the one drop myth has oversimplified the complexity of our mixedness.

Chart from
See that little gene below? Well, one physical change from that one gene (let's say green eyes) creates a haplotype of a green eyed person. All the green eyed people together are a haplogroup of green eyed people.
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
What is race?
When attempting to describe biological "race" we need to include the concepts of phenotype, cline and our vast family tree roots.
phenotype: the set of characteristics of a living thing, resulting from its combination of genes and the effect of its environment
cline: a series of similar items in which each is almost the same as the ones next to it, but the last is very different from the first
family tree roots: We each have over a million ancestors counting back only 20 generations. As the roots expand they cover a larger geographic area.
Many anthropologists don't believe in the controversial concept of biological "race", rather they understand the facts of biological phenotypes and clines.
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
What Creates Our Identity
Charts to assist those who ask
"What are you?"
and
"What am I?"
"What are you?"
and
"What am I?"
Make your map free at bubbl.us
It has been illegal for the government of France to collect data on ethnicity and race since 1789.
However, civil rights lawyers in the U.S. use 'race' data to prove discrimination.
Colors are not races.
People are Tints and Shades of flesh color.
"Citing Blumenbach by name, Emerson agrees that races shade into each other imperceptibly."
-Nell Irvin Painter, The History of White People


Makeup from brushesbykaren
Hair from headkandy
In 1997, the American Association of Physical Anthropologists urged the American governmnet to phase out the use of race as a data category and to substitute ethnic categories instead. Geneticists studying DNA ... were also concluding that race as a biological category made no sense. --Nell Irvin Painter
Some chapters from the book
"Modernizing the U.S. Census"
Modernizing the U.S. Census
Modernizing the U.S. Census
Modernizing the U.S. Census
YouTube response explaining One Human Race
Here is the information I could not find on the US census website. The answers to the questions: How many 'race' categories does the US feel are worthy of recognizing? Why has the US been collecting data on race and ethnicity? How is the data used?
From the webpage:
A Brief History of Census “Race”
Frank W. Sweet, author of Legal History of the Color Line
Changes in “Racial” Categories
Changes in Stated “Racial” Goals
-Frank W Sweet, A Brief History of Census “Race”
Multiracialism In America - Jane Junn
Choose one or more:
☐ Mixed
☐ Other
☐ Unsure
☐ Don't know
☐ None of your business
Snoop finds out what percentage of Native American, European and African he is.
Should I stop using the word "race"?
Unless you are a physical anthropologist, or discussing the word itself, the word 'race' should be avoided.
Replace the word 'race' with ethnicity. True, the meaning is different, but conversations about human differences usually revolve around ethnic differences.
The term 'race' equates to the noun 'breed'. Humans do not want to be thought of as breeds. -getgln
Nell Irvin Painter
Professor of American History, Princeton
Speaking about the History of White People
Using the term 'race' runs the risk of sounding uneducated, and worse, the risk of sounding racist.
NYTimes.com - Being Multiracial in America
Mixed
Listen at 3:20
Labels:
census,
cline,
ethnicity,
eye color,
hair color,
human cline,
human clines,
human kind,
human rights,
human species,
identity,
melanin,
race,
race and color,
skin color,
skin tone,
social justice
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