The difference that ‘one drop’ makes: Mexican and African Americans, mixedness and racial categorisation in the early twentieth century
Aragon, Margarita.
2014.
The difference that ‘one drop’ makes: Mexican and African Americans, mixedness and racial categorisation in the early twentieth century.
Subjectivity, 7(1),
pp. 18-36.
ISSN 1755-6341
[Article]
Using archival materials, I will examine how the mixed ancestry of African and Mexican Americans was treated, both in law and discourse, in distinctly contrasting ways in the early twentieth century. I will argue that black and Mexican subjects were positioned in qualitatively different ways in relation to whiteness. Furthermore, the singular treatment of ‘black blood’ as a social toxin, a construction emerging within the specific circumstances of American slavery, also informed the subjective positioning of Mexicans, as well as shaping some Mexican Americans’ responses to racism.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Keywords | mixedness hybridity Mexican-Americans African-Americans |
| Departments, Centres and Research Units | Sociology |
| Date Deposited | 07 Jun 2018 13:27 |
| Last Modified | 05 Mar 2025 23:13 |
