Rethinking 'Mixed Race'

Rethinking 'Mixed Race'

by David Parker (Editor), Miri Song (Editor)

Synopsis

One of the fastest growing ethnic populations in many Western societies is that of people of mixed descent. However, when talking about multicultural societies or `mixed race', the discussion usually focuses on people of black and white heritage. The contributors to this collection rectify this with a broad and pluralistic approach to the experiences of 'mixed race' people in Britain and the USA.

The contributors argue that people of mixed descent reveal the arbitrary and contested logic of categorisation underpinning racial divisions. Falling outside the prevailing definitions of racialised identities, their histories and experiences illuminate the complexities of identity formation in the contemporary multicultural context. The authors examine a range of issues. These include gender; transracial and intercountry adoptions in Britain and the US; interracial partnering and marriage; `mixed race' and family in the English-African diaspora; theorising of `mixed race' that transcends the black/white binary and includes explorations of 'mixtures' among non-white minority groups; and the social and political evolution of multiracial panethnicity.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 208
Publisher: Pluto Press
Published: 20 May 2001

ISBN 10: 0745315674
ISBN 13: 9780745315676

Author Bio
David Parker is a lecturer in the Department of Cultural Studies and Sociology at the University of Birmingham. Miri Song is a lecturer in the Department of Sociology, University of Kent at Canterbury.