Blood, Race, and National Identity: Scientific and Popular Discourses

Posted in Articles, Europe, Health/Medicine/Genetics, History, Media Archive, Social Science, United States on 2010-03-21 02:35Z by Steven

Blood, Race, and National Identity: Scientific and Popular Discourses

Journal of Medical Humanities
Volume 23, Numbers 3-4 (December, 2002)
Pages 171-186
Print ISSN: 1041-3545; Online ISSN: 1573-3645
DOI: 10.1023/A:1016890117447

Allyson Polsky McCabe, Lecturer in English
Yale University

This essay examines the symbolic significance of blood in the twentieth century and its role in determining the composition of a national community along racial lines. By drawing parallels between Nazi notions of blood and racial purity and historically contemporaneous U.S. policies regarding blood and blood products, Polsky reveals a disturbing proximity in discourse and policy. While the Nazis attempted to locate Jewish racial essence and inferiority in blood and instituted eugenic measures and laws forbidding racial admixture, similar policies existed in the U.S. based on the so-called one drop rule that systematically discriminated against African Americans.

Read or purchase the article here.

Tags: , ,

Telling a Tall Tale, Family-Style—Author and Cultural Historian Scott Sandage Delivers 17th Annual Levine Lecture

Posted in Articles, History, Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive, Native Americans/First Nation, Social Science, United States on 2010-03-19 01:36Z by Steven

Telling a Tall Tale, Family-Style—Author and Cultural Historian Scott Sandage Delivers 17th Annual Levine Lecture

Rider University News
Rider University, New Jersey
2008-10-16

For all his traditional academic rearing, Scott Sandage readily concedes that the revival of narrative has brought a new vitality to the discipline of history. “It was long considered unintellectual to tell stories,” explained Sandage, an associate professor of History at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. “But today, with the rise in history writers like David McCullough, it’s become a way to compete with them for people’s attention.”

Sandage, who presented the 17th Annual Levine Lecture at Rider University on October 16, arrived with a new twist on a story that had been often told on the old American frontier, but was unfamiliar to the capacity audience in the Sweigart Auditorium. In doing so, Sandage not only shone a new light on the social conceptions of race, but framed it in a surprisingly personal context.

A noted author and cultural historian, Sandage specializes in the 19th century United States and in the changing aspects of American identity. He spoke in support of his current book project, Half-Breed Creek: A Tall Tale of Race on the Frontier, which focuses on a little-known, mixed-race Native American reservation in southeast Nebraska and investigates how family folklore has shaped racial identity in the United States.

“This is a story of what race is and how Americans have determined what race a person belongs to based on what stories can be told about them,” Sandage began. He set the scene of the so-called Half-Breed Creek, a reservation established by the United States government in 1856 as a place for those who claimed partial, but not full, Native American lineage. “The thinking was that the smart, educated half of the half-breed would organize the Indians into making trouble” in the already tenuous location, situated in the only spot in the United States where slave, free and Indian territories met at the same time, he explained…

Read the entire article here.

Tags: ,

Miscegenation Facts […From 1879]

Posted in Articles, Canada, History, Media Archive on 2010-03-17 05:00Z by Steven

Miscegenation Facts […From 1879]

Daily British Colonist
Vicoria, British Columbia
1879-10-07
21st Year
Page 1, 2nd Column

David W. Higgins, Editor and Proprietor

The child of colored parents of different tints, such as quadroon and mulatto, or mulatto and black, will be nearer to the tint of the darker parent.  If both parents of the same color, the child will be a shade darker, and singularly enough, the second child will be darker than the first, the third darker than the second, and so on to the last. In other words, a colored community, left to itself, is fatally destined to return to the original African black after a limited number of generations.  Thus, while each alliance with an individual of pure Caucasian blood brings the negro a step nearer to the white standard, the reverse is the case the moment the Caucasian element is withheld, and the color retrogrades from light to dark…

Continue reading the “facts” in this article here.

Tags: , ,

My People Will Sleep for One Hundred Years: Story of a Métis Self

Posted in Anthropology, Canada, Dissertations, History, Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive, Politics/Public Policy, Social Science on 2010-03-17 03:57Z by Steven

My People Will Sleep for One Hundred Years: Story of a Métis Self

University of Victoria
2004
106 pages

Sylvia Rae Cottell, B.F.A.
Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design

A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in the Department of Educational Psychology and Leadership Studies at the University of Victoria.

“My people will sleep for one hundred years when they awake, it will be the artists who give them their spirit back.”
Louis Riel

As a result of the current political debate that surrounds the definition of Métis, the issue of Métis identity on both community and individual levels is often challenged in a public forum. Metis people outside of the areas considered the main hubs of Metis culture are likely to be faced with a myriad of different factors that impact their identity, including lack of community connections and limited contact with Métis cultural influences. There is a need to openly voice the diverse experiences of being Métis in order to affirm the experiences of many Métis people. This autoethnographic study aims to provide an account of an experience of being Métis and to salvage a sense of identity after many generations of assimilation. Autoethnography provides the freedom necessary for the representation of cultural values that are beyond the traditional assumptions of academic discourse (Spry, 2001) and aims to engage the reader on an emotional level. A purpose of this study is to validate the experience of many Métis readers and to enhance the level of culturally relevant practice provided to Métis individuals and communities by counsellors.

Read the entire thesis here.

Tags: , ,

Metis Identity Creation and Tactical Responses to Oppression and Racism

Posted in Anthropology, Articles, Canada, History, Identity Development/Psychology, Media Archive, Politics/Public Policy, Social Science on 2010-03-17 03:37Z by Steven

Metis Identity Creation and Tactical Responses to Oppression and Racism

Variegations Journal
University of Victoria, Canada
Volume 2 (2005)
ISSN: 1708-9840

Cathy Richardson
Indigenous Governance
University of Victoria, Victoria, Canada

As one of Canada’s founding Aboriginal people (Department of Justice Canada, 1982), the Metis exist at the periphery of the Canadian historical, cultural and social landscape. Today, the Metis are starting to write themselves into larger historical and social sciences narratives, reclaiming their right to inclusion and belonging after generations of living “underground” without public cultural expression. The Canadian Metis are an Aboriginal group who celebrate their mixed ancestry and identify with a unique Metis culture.  This culture evolved and crystallized after the Metis lived together for generations, mixing and mingling with other Metis of both English and French-speaking origins. Due to the forces of colonization, the Metis exist as marginalized Aboriginal people living between a number of cultural worlds within the larger Euro-Canadian society. In “Becoming Metis: The Relationship Between The Sense of Metis Self and Cultural Stories” (Richardson, 2004), I elucidate various tactics used by Metis people to create a personal and cultural identity. In this paper, I draw on this work to present some of the socio-political conditions that set the context for a Metis tactical identity development.

I present and discuss some of the responses enacted by key Metis interview participants in the process of creating a “sense of Metis self.” These tactical responses were, and are, performed by Metis people who are trying to balance their need for safety and inclusion with a need to live as cultural beings in a European Canada. I term the responses “tactical,” as opposed to “strategic,” in response to an important distinction between oppressor and oppressed in colonial societies. Political strategies and strategic responses tend to be developed for long-term use by those in political positions of relative power, on secure ground whereas tactical responses tend to be developed “on the move,” as short-term acts to attack political oppression. For example, General [Frederick Dobson] Middleton implemented strategic military plans to defeat the Metis, while Louis Riel and Gabriel Dumont employed tactical acts in response to Middleton’s attacks. Finally, after discussing various tactical responses, I close with some explanations about how Metis people have developed a third space to create a Metis cultural identity…

Read the entire article here.

Tags: ,

From Narratives of Miscegenation to Post-Modernist Re-Imagining: Toward a Historiography of Coloured Identity in South Africa

Posted in Africa, Articles, History, Media Archive, Social Science, South Africa on 2010-03-16 22:03Z by Steven

From Narratives of Miscegenation to Post-Modernist Re-Imagining: Toward a Historiography of Coloured Identity in South Africa

African Historical Review
Volume 40, Issue 1 (June 2008)
pages 77 – 100
DOI: 10.1080/17532520802249472

Mohamed Adhikari, Associate Professor of History
University of Cape Town, South Africa

This article traces changing interpretations of the nature of Coloured identity and the history of the Coloured community in South Africa in both popular thinking as well as the academy. It explores some of the main contestations that have arisen between rival schools of thought, particularly their stance on the popular perception that Colouredness is an inherent racial condition derived from miscegenation. This essay identifies four distinct paradigms in historical writing on the Coloured people. Firstly, there is the essentialist school which regards Colouredness as a product of miscegenation and represents the conventional understanding of the identity. Secondly, instrumentalists view Coloured identity as an artificial creation of the white ruling class who used it as a ploy to divide and rule the black majority. This explanation, which first emerged in academic writing in the early 1980s, held sway in anti-apartheid circles. Opposing these interpretations are what may be termed the social constructionists who from the early 1990s stressed the complexities of identity formation and the agency of Coloured people in the making of their own identities. Most recently the rudiments of a fourth approach, of applying postmodern theory, especially the concept of creolisation, to Coloured identity have appeared.

Read or purchase the article here.

Tags: , ,

White Over Black: American Attitudes Toward the Negro, 1550-1812

Posted in Books, Economics, History, Media Archive, Monographs, Slavery, Social Science, United States on 2010-03-16 00:38Z by Steven

White Over Black: American Attitudes Toward the Negro, 1550-1812

University of North Carolina Press
1968-09-25 (Republished: September 1995)
671 pages
8.9 x 6 x 1.4 inches
ISBN: 978-0-8078-4550-9
Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Virginia

Winthrop D. Jordan (1931-2007)

  • Winner of the 1968 Francis Parkman Prize, Society of American Historians
  • Winner of the 1969 National Book Award
  • Winner of the 1969 Bancroft Prize, Columbia University
  • Winner of the 1968 Ralph Waldo Emerson Award, Phi Beta Kappa

The paperback edition of Jordan’s classic and award-winning work on the history of American race relations.

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments

Part One. GENESIS 1550-1700

I. First Impressions: Initial English Confrontation with Africans

  1. The Blackness Without
  2. The Causes of Complexion
  3. Defective Religion
  4. Savage Behavior
  5. The Apes of Africa
  6. The Blackness Within

II. Unthinking Decision: Enslavement of Negroes in America to 1700

  1. The Necessities of a New World
  2. Freedom and Bondage in the English Tradition
  3. The Concept of Slavery
  4. The Practices of Portingals and Spanyards
  5. Enslavement: The West Indies
  6. Enslavement: New England
  7. Enslavement: Virginia and Maryland
  8. Enslavement: New York and the Carolinas
  9. The Un-English: Scots, Irish, and Indians
  10. Racial Slavery: From Reasons to Rational

Part Two. PROVINCIAL DECADES 1700-1755
III. Anxious Oppressors: Freedom and Control in a Slave Society

  1. Demographic Configurations in the Colonies
  2. Slavery and the Senses of the Laws
  3. Slave Rebelliousness and the White Mastery
  4. Free Negroes and Fears of Freedom
  5. Racial Slavery in a Free Society

IV. Fruits of Passion: The Dynamics of Interracial Sex

  1. Regional Styles in Racial Intermixture
  2. Masculine and Feminine Modes in Carolina and America
  3. Negro Sexuality and Slave Insurrection
  4. Dismemberment, Physiology, and Sexual Perceptions
  5. The Secularization of Reproduction
  6. Mulatto Offspring in a Biracial Society

V. The Souls of Men: The Negro’s Spiritual Nature

  1. Christian Principles and the Failure of Conversion
  2. The Question of Negro Capacity
  3. Spiritual Equality and Temporal Subordination
  4. The Thin Edge of Antislavery
  5. Inclusion and Exclusion in the Protestant Churches
  6. Religious Revivial and the Impact of Conversion

VI. The Bodies of Men: The Negro’s Physical Nature

  1. Confusion, Order and Hierarchy
  2. Negroes, Apes, and Beasts
  3. Rational Science and Irrational Logic
  4. Indians, Africans, and the Complexion of Man
  5. The Valuation of Color
  6. Negroes Under the Skin

Part Three. THE REVOLUTIONARY ERA 1755-1783
VII. Self-Scrutiny in the Revolutionary Era

  1. Quaker Conscience and Consciousness
  2. The Discovery of Prejudice
  3. Assertions of Sameness
  4. Environmentalism and Revolutionary Ideology
  5. The Secularization of Equality
  6. The Proslavery Case of Negro Inferiority
  7. The Revolution as Turning Point

Pt. 4 SOCIETY AND THOUGHT 1783-1812
VIII. The Imperatives of Economic Interest and National Identity

  1. The Economics of Slavery
  2. Union and Sectionalism
  3. A National Forum for Debate
  4. Nationhood and Identity
  5. Non-English Englishment

IX. The Limitations of Antislavery

  1. The Pattern of Antislavry
  2. The Failings of Revolutionary Ideology
  3. The Quaker View Beyond Emancipation
  4. Religious Equalitarianism
  5. Humanitarianism and Sentimentality
  6. The Success and Failure of Antislavery

X. The Cancer of Revolution

  1. St. Domingo
  2. Non-Importation of Rebellion
  3. The Contagion of Liberty
  4. Slave Disobedience in America
  5. The Impact of Negro Revolt

XI. The Resulting Pattern of Separation

  1. The Hardening of Slavery
  2. Restraint of Free Negroes
  3. The Walls of Separation
  4. Negro Churches

Part Five THOUGH AND SOCIETY 1783-1812
XII. Thomas Jefferson: Self and Society

  1. Jefferson: The Tyranny of Slavery
  2. Jefferson: The Assertion of Negro Inferiority
  3. The Issue of Intellect
  4. The Acclaim of Talented Negroes
  5. Jefferson: Passionate Realities
  6. Jefferson: White Women and Black
  7. Interracial Sex: The Individual and His Society
  8. Jefferson: A Dichotomous View of Triracial America

XIII. The Negro Bound by the Chain of Being

  1. Linnaean Categories and the Chain of Being
  2. Two Modes of Equality
  3. The Hierarchies of Men
  4. Anatomical Investigations
  5. Unlinking and Linking the Chain
  6. Faithful Philosophy in Defense of Human Unity
  7. The Study of Man in the Republic

XIV. Erasing Nature’s Stamp of Color

  1. Nature’s Blackball
  2. The Effects of Climate and Civilization
  3. The Disease of Color
  4. White Negroes
  5. The Logic of Blackness and Inner Similarity
  6. The Winds of Change
  7. An End of Environmentalism
  8. Persistent Themes

XV. Toward a White Man’s Country

  1. The Emancipation and Intermixture
  2. The Beginning of Colonization
  3. The Virginia Program
  4. Insurrection and Expatriation in Virginia
  5. The Meaning of Negro Removal

XVI. Exodus

Note on the Concept of Race
Essay on Sources
Select List of Full Titles
Map: Percentage of Negroes in Total Non-Aboriginal Population, 1790
Index

Tags: , , ,

Entangling Alliances: Foreign War Brides and American Soldiers in the Twentieth Century

Posted in Asian Diaspora, Books, History, Media Archive, Monographs, United States, Women on 2010-03-15 17:09Z by Steven

Entangling Alliances: Foreign War Brides and American Soldiers in the Twentieth Century

New York University Press
2010-03-22
320 pages, 8 illustrations
ISBN: 9780814797174

Susan Zeiger

Throughout the twentieth century, American male soldiers returned home from wars with foreign-born wives in tow, often from allied but at times from enemy nations, resulting in a new, official category of immigrant: the “allied” war bride. These brides began to appear en masse after World War I, peaked after World War II, and persisted through the Korean and Vietnam Wars. GIs also met and married former “enemy” women under conditions of postwar occupation, although at times the US government banned such unions.

In this comprehensive, complex history of war brides in 20th-century American history, Susan Zeiger uses relationships between American male soldiers and foreign women as a lens to view larger issues of sexuality, race, and gender in United States foreign relations. Entangling Alliances draws on a rich array of sources to trace how war and postwar anxieties about power and national identity have long been projected onto war brides, and how these anxieties translate into public policies, particularly immigration.

Table of Contents

  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • 1. “Cupid in the AEF”: U.S. Soldiers and Women abroad in World War I
  • 2. “The Worst Kind of Women”: Foreign War Brides in 1920s America
  • 3. GIs and Girls around the Globe: The Geopolitics of Sex and Marriage in World War II
  • 4. “Good Mothers”: GI Brides after World War II
  • 5. Interracialism, Pluralism, and Civil Rights: War Bride Marriage in the 1940s and 1950s
  • 6. The Demise of the War Bride: Korea, Vietnam, and Beyond
  • Notes
  • Index
  • About the Author

…One of the most important factors in the structuring of soldier marriage has been race. The state’s repression and condemnation of interracial relationships was a feature of war bride marriage for much of the century. In World War I, for instance, U.S. military and civilian authorities took a paternalistic stance toward white soldiers, determined to “protect” them from sexually promiscuous foreign women. But this attitude was reversed in the case of “colored troops,” as military officials warned allies of the sexual danger that African American servicemen allegedly posed to the white women of other nations. By World War II, racial ideology in the United States had begun to face resistance by activists of color and their white allies, who challenged racial segregation in the military and at home, as well as “oriental exclusion” in immigration policy. Yet despite the state of flux in race relations in the 1940s and 1950s, the U.S. government, with the urging of the armed services, maintained its segregationist policies in soldier marriage.  These included initially excluding Asian women from the GI Brides Act and denying the marriage requests of black and white interracial couples on the grounds that “miscegenous unions” were illegal in many U.S. states. Deeply held views about racial inferiors and superiors continued to underlie American military engagement in the Cold War. The legacy of biracial relationships in the Vietnam War, as it involved Vietnamese women, American men, and their “Amerasian” children, is one further indication of the centrality of race in analyzing gender relationships in wartime and postwar periods…

Tags: , , ,

Preserving Racial Identity: Population Patterns and the Application of Anti-Miscegenation Statutes to Asian Americans, 1910-1950

Posted in Articles, Asian Diaspora, History, Law, Media Archive, Politics/Public Policy, United States on 2010-03-15 01:34Z by Steven

Preserving Racial Identity: Population Patterns and the Application of Anti-Miscegenation Statutes to Asian Americans, 1910-1950

Berkeley Asian Law Journal
Volume 9, Number 1 (2002)
pages 1-40

Gabriel J. Chin
University of Arizona James E. Rogers College of Law; University of Arizona School of Government and Public Policy

Hrishi Karthikeyan
New York University School of Law

This essay explores the relationship between Asian American population and applicability of anti-miscegenation laws to that group in the first half of the 20th Century, testing legal scholar Gilbert Thomas Stephenson‘s theory that racial restrictions would arise whenever non-whites of any race exist in considerable numbers. Several states prohibited Asian-white intermarriage even though the Asian American numbers failed even remotely to approach those of the white population in those states. These anti-miscegenation statutes were unique in the Jim Crow regime in the degree of specificity with which they defined the racial categories subject to the restrictions, using precise terms like Japanese or Mongolians, rather than broad terms like colored. Further, the number of statutes applicable to Asians more than doubled between 1910 and 1950, even though census data shows that the proportion of Asian population was stable or declining in these states, and in any event tiny.

The proliferation of anti-Asian miscegenation laws raises important questions about the racial landscape of our country during this period. Correlating census data with the development of anti-miscegenation statutes suggests that population does have an impact on whether states would restrict Asian marriage, but in a more complex way than Stephenson proposed. In all states in which Asian-white marriage was restricted by race, so too was African American-white intermarriage; no statutes targeted Asians alone. But in virtually all states restricting African American intermarriage where there was a discernable Asian population – 1/2000th or more – Asian intermarriage was also regulated. The combination of a state’s inclination to segregate, plus a visible Asian population, reliably predicts when Asians would be covered by a statute. This suggests that in the states where racially diverse populations were seen as threats appropriately subject to legal regulation, the nature of the problems presented by the various races was the same.

Read the entire article here.

Tags: , , ,

Mixing Bodies and Beliefs: The Predicament of Tribes

Posted in Articles, History, Law, Media Archive, Native Americans/First Nation, Politics/Public Policy, United States on 2010-03-14 23:39Z by Steven

Mixing Bodies and Beliefs: The Predicament of Tribes

Columbia Law Review
Volume 101, Number 4 (May 2001)

L. Scott Gould

This Article considers a dilemma faced by tribes in a post-inherent sovereignty world. Tribes have increasingly come to be defined through the use of blood quanta as racial entities. This practice raises the legal question whether and to what extent Congress can confer benefits on tribes pursuant to the Indian Commerce Clause without violating the equal protection component of the Due Process Clause. Professor Gould explores the current dilemma from legal, historical, and demographic perspectives. He concludes that a recent Supreme Court decision involving Native Hawaiians portends growing judicial hostility to groups that base their memberships on common ancestry. Based on recent demographic trends, the Article observes that tribes are already multi-racially diverse. In conclusion, Professor Gould urges tribes to redefine their membership criteria, risking change in order to regain sovereignty and ultimately preserve tribal cultures.

Tags: ,