[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Very insightful and important indeed!
Amy

Hello all - FYI - I found this article to be very insightful. Please let me
know what you think of it?
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http://www.blackcommentator.com/138/138_whiteness.html
A Review of Who is White?: Latinos, Asians, and the
New Black/Nonblack Divide by George Yancey
(Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2003).

In 1903 the ever-forward looking W.E.B. DuBois declared, "The problem of the
twentieth century is the problem of the color line."

A century later, the relevance of DuBois's observation is being contested by
those preoccupied with the increasing ethnic and cultural diversification of
the US. Many argue that DuBois's centralization of the boundary between the
entangled black and white worlds is outdated, going so far as to propose
that we now have "colorlines."

Such gestures are more than semantic and instead imply that blackness as the
definitive social boundary for US race
relations is either less pronounced or completely erased by the significant
presence of nonblack racial minorities such as Latino/as and Asian
Americans.

This is precisely why George Yancey's book "Who is White?: Latinos, Asians,
and the New Black/Nonblack Divide" is such a necessary read.

Yancey, a sociologist at the University of North Texas, provides compelling
evidence that supports the (unstated) hypothesis that the color line of the
twentieth century will remain firmly entrenched in the twenty-first. Using
as his point of departure the popular projection that whites will soon be a
minority group, Yancey opens his book by arguing that whites will remain the
majority despite the growing populations of Latino/as and Asian Americans.

How can the increase of Latino/as and Asian Americans enforce, rather than
disrupt, the color line?

Simple. By 2050, according to Yancey, most Latino/as and Asian Americans
will be white. For those who consider race to be a biological fact rather
than a social and political one, Yancey's projection is sure to raise
eyebrows. Yet his argument is grounded in an understanding of how whiteness,
like any racial category, is socially and politically defined yet enacted in
real and meaningful ways. Whiteness is also fluid and maintains itself when
threatened by incorporating previously excluded groups.

In the chapter "How to be White," Yancey covers ground commonly discussed by
practitioners of what is becoming institutionalized as "whiteness studies,"
including the racialized discrimination and nativism that different European
ethnic groups faced before they eventually became socially accepted by
Anglos and then later by a more expansive pan-European race simply known as
"white."

Since it is generally argued that these ethnic groups were able to
assimilate into whiteness because they had similar phenotypes and could
trace their roots to Europe -- a point Yancey acknowledges -- what makes Who
is White? so provocative is its author suggests that European phenotype or
ancestry will no longer be prerequisites for becoming white.

While the US Census Bureau treats Latino/as as an "ethnic group" of sorts by
emphasizing Latin American origin,
many are socially read as "brown." Most Asian Americans are markedly
non-European in phenotype and ancestry. Nevertheless, Yancey argues that
while they may experience patterns of discrimination and racism from whites,
both Latino/as and Asian Americans are following the same pattern of
assimilation as Europeans did before them.

Grounding his study within the framework of noted sociologist Milton Gordon,
whose work on assimilation emphasized social acceptance by the majority and
identification with it from the minority, Yancey provides compelling
evidence indicating that Latino/as and Asian Americans are well on their way
to becoming white.

In the chapter "They are Okay -- Just Keep Them Away from Me," the author
analyzes survey data on racial groups' social attitudes regarding who they
approve as potential neighbors as well as marriage partners for their
children.

Contrary to the popular image of blacks as racially restrictive, Yancey
discovers that black respondents are the most open to all other races.  Yet
despite being the most receptive to other groups, blacks in general are
rejected by all nonblack groups -- whites, Latino/as and Asian Americans.

While some assume that whites will be closed off to anyone not white,
Yancey's research show that white respondents are more accepting of
Latino/as and Asian Americans than they are of blacks. In turn, Latino/a and
Asian American respondents are fairly receptive to one another as well as
whites. Overall, Yancey's findings reveal that whites, Latino/as and Asian
Americans do not tend to reject one another as possible neighbors or their
kids' spouses, but all three groups show a general resistance to blacks in
these social roles.

That all three nonblack groups were found to be more accepting of one
another in a way that they were not of blacks suggests that assimilation may
be less about desiring whiteness as it is avoiding blackness. Yancey
concludes, "The rejection of African Americans, rather than the acceptance
of European Americans, is the best explanation of social distance in the
United States."

This assessment will surely be criticized for being "pro assimilationist," a
response Yancey anticipates: "It is debatable whether assimilation is a
desirable goal for racial minority groups.  I do not take a position either
way.  However, understanding the ability of a given minority group to
assimilate is necessary for determining the degree of acceptance experienced
by that minority group."

Another criticism of Yancey's work may come from those who argue that
Latino/as and Asian Americans are different from whites based upon cultural
norms. Such proponents may think that Yancey's emphasis on majority
acceptance gives "whites too much power" by ignoring Latino/as -- and Asian
Americans -- distinct cultures or worldviews.  Yet Yancey shows that despite
their supposed cultural differences from the white majority, Latino/as and
Asians Americans do not necessarily reject dominant culture and ideology
when it comes to racial politics.

For example, Yancey shows that, for the most part, Latino/as and Asian
Americans express dimensions of what he labels a white racial identity,
which, according to the sociologist, emphasizes individualism,
color-blindness or an aversion to dealing with race, and a belief in
European cultural normativity.  Analyzing survey data measuring respondents'
opinions of "racialized" issues such as affirmative action, prison spending,
welfare, and talking about race, Yancey determines that, even when
controlling for social and demographic characteristics, "there was no
situation where the nonblack minority groups differed significantly in a
direction opposite from that by which European Americans differed from
African Americans."

 In other words, black respondents were the only group to demonstrate a
"distinct" worldview -- due, according to Yancey, from experiencing an
intense amount of social alienation.

Conversely, Latino/a and Asian American respondents did not significantly
distinguish their opinions from those held by white respondents.  This
finding suggests that despite their current status as non-whites, Latino/as
and Asian Americans are more apt to hold a white world view than a black
one.

Overall, while some will surely dismiss Who is White? as "academic" -- a
practice many activists and even
academics engage in when confronted with political conclusions that make
them uncomfortable - Yancey's research is extremely relevant for
contemporary racial politics.  Most importantly, Yancey's findings hint at
possible inadequacies of current approaches to "multiracial" America, most
of which emphasize a white/non-white paradigm that minimizes or outright
dismisses the reality of antiblack racism as the structuring and generative
ideology of US race relations and social inequality.

Thus, Who is White? is more than a rich sociological study; it also serves
as a blueprint for the political possibilities that lie before us if left
unaddressed.  In the final chapter, Yancey leaves us with a concluding
remark that will hopefully be appreciated for its DuBoisian approach, which
is one that challenges today's activists and intellectuals to not only deal
with the past and present, but also with the very real possibilities of
America's racial future: "Previous research on majority group domination
tends to be built upon either the concept that white supremacy is, or was,
the dominant ideology among majority group members, or the concept that
dominant group members utilize notions of color blindness to protect their
racial position of privilege.  Both concepts lead to an understanding of an
American racial hierarchy formed by a white/nonwhite dichotomy.  In such a
system all non-European groups face social rejection and theoretically all
non-European groups deserve an equal amount of academic attention -- even if
they have not been receiving it.  Yet given the merging of nonblack racial
minorities into the dominant culture, this white/nonwhite dichotomy is
losing relevance.  A black/nonblack dichotomy produces more understanding
about contemporary race relations.  It suggests that the informal rejection
of African Americans, rather than a tendency by the majority to oppress all
minority groups in a roughly equal manner, is the linchpin to the American
contemporary racial hierarchy."

Tamara K. Nopper is a Ph.D. candidate in sociology at Temple University in
Philadelphia.  She is currently working on her dissertation which explores
the different sources of capital and resources available to Korean
immigrants to open, run and expand small businesses in the US. Contact her
at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Copyright 2005 Tamara K. Nopper
--- End forwarded message ---








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