“The interface of racial identity development with identity complexity in clinical social work student practitioners”. By Dennis Miehls.

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“The interface of racial identity development with identity complexity in clinical social work student practitioners”. By Dennis Miehls.
I like to say that I have a transnational, multicultural, multiethnic identity. I am hapa, haafu, I am both/and, Japanese AND American. But I know that many others still see the world in dichotomies, as either/or, Japanese OR American. I know what I look like. I’ve seen my face in the mirror before. But I forget that others might see me differently than I see myself. And I know who I am. But I am aware that others usually do not know me. I was reminded of this while riding in a taxi with my 108 year-old grandmother in Matsuyama, a city on the island of Shikoku. Incredibly, she still likes shopping and chatted excitedly as we drove downtown to Mitsukoshi, her favorite department store. The taxi driver eyed me for a while in the rear view mirror before asking the inevitable question, “Where are you from?” I tried to dampen his curiosity. “Tokyo,” I answered curtly. But he was not easily discouraged, “I mean which country?” “Country?” I repeated, as if it was a dumb question. “I think Tokyo is in Japan, isn’t it?” He looked at me strangely before laughing nervously. He was puzzled. He expected me to say America. Of course I could say America. My father was American and I lived there half my life. But I could also say Japan. I was born here, my mother, wife and children are Japanese and I have lived the other half of my life here. Then again, I could also say that I am multicultural, multilingual, multinational, transnational, international or a global citizen, not just a citizen of any one country. My grandmother sitting beside me interrupted my musings by declaring to the taxi driver, “He’s an American, from the United States.” I was about to protest, “Yes, but I am also Japanese,” but knew that it was futile; after all these years living in Japan, working for a national university, even legally becoming a Japanese citizen, she still thinks of me as her beloved American grandson.
Stephen Murphy-Shigematsu, “My Transnational Hapa Identity In Question,” Discover Nikkei 2/22/13 (via racialicious)
Flashback Thursday: Lenny Kravitz
(Afro-Bahamian, African-American, Russian Jewish) [American]
Known as: Multiple Grammy award winning singer-songwriter, musician, record producer & actor (Father of Zoë Kravitz, Ex-Husband of Lisa Bonet)
Music Videos: Let Love Rule, Are You Gonna Go My Way, Fly Away, American Woman, Rock and Roll Is Dead, It Ain’t Over ‘til It’s Over, Lady
Movies: Cinna in “The Hunger Games” series, “Precious”, “The Rugrats Movie”
More Information: Lenny Kravitz’s Official Site, Lenny Kravitz’s Twitter page, Lenny Kravitz’s Facebook page, Lenny Kravitz’s IMDb page, Lenny Kravitz’s Wikipedia page
Originally featured on April 22, 2011
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In the past three decades, the number of interracial marriages in the United States has increased by more than 800%. Now over four million children and teenagers do not identify themselves as being just one race or another. Here is a book that allows these young people to speak in...
Your experience as a multi* person in facing oppression and discrimination, either because of your various identities or purely on the basis of your multi* identity, is unique and cannot and should not be defined by mono* people.
Too often, we multi* people are told that we face no discrimination...
We are not here for you to look at
We do not exist to satisfy your gaze
We are not here for you to fetishize and dehumanize
We are real people who are not around simply for you to objectify and exotify
I’m sure all multi* people have heard the ridiculous and fetishist stereotype that “all...
You know what I’d like to see more of in film? Biracial families. I know a few TV shows who’ve done it, but we’re not seeing much of it in movies. It bugs me how we have so much diversity in families nowadays and it’s not really recognized or “made normal”. Families aren’t always all black, or all...
One of the distinctive features of Americans is how we define ourselves by our un-Americanness.
“I’m half Irish,” we say proudly. “A quarter Italian. An eighth German. A thirty-second French,” as if nationality is something that is genetically inheritable.
The U.S. isn’t the only country of immigrants, but we’re the only ones who do this. Australians, just as recent a country as our own, are far less prone to fractioning off their lineage. My Irish friend Ciara’s, mother is American, so by our standards, Ciara is “half-American.” But by her’s, she’s 100 percent Irish, just with an American mum.
I don’t think it’s bad that we do this. It’s kind of cute. But until this semester, I had never realized it was a uniquely American tradition.
Anyway, I’m one-eighth Hungarian, and my name is two-thirds Hungarian (my middle and last names). But it took only a few minutes in Budapest to realize that I personally am zero percent Hungarian. The language looked almost comically foreign to me, and my only sense of the local cuisine and customs was from my Let’s Go travel guide.
I've noticed the same thing while I've been abroad. In America if someone asked me what I was I would say "half Puerto Rican and half Irish" but spending time in Ireland has made me realize how false that is.
In Ireland I'm just "American"; my passport is American, my accent is American, my mannerisms are American, it was where I was born and raised.
Ireland has its own culture and ways of doing things that are completely different from what I'm used to at home (The U.S.) and if an Irish person asked me what I was I wouldn't dream of telling them "I'm half Irish" I would say "I have family from Ireland/family from Puerto Rico.
No one from Ireland has even asked me "what are you?" Not only is it not part of the culture to be so direct but its not something people think of in the terms we would in the U.S. It only comes up when talking to other Americans. Even when speaking to an Australian student her views on ethnicity were very different and placed less emphasis on it then Americans do.
It really puts new perspective on my own personal identity when being "half Irish" was so important and I'm beginning to see myself as simply "American."
Tia Hwang (aka Tia Cuevas) (Anniversary Month Rewind)
Jay’s Note: Tia (of the KPop band “Chocolat”) received much attention at her DailyMulti page in 2012 :)
Originally Featured: February 18, 2012
(Korean/German-Puerto Rican) [American]
Known as: Singer, Dancer & Model (Member of the Korean Pop Group “Chocolat”)
Music Videos: Syndrome, Same Thing To Her,
More Information: Tia Cuevas Fan Tumblr, Chocolat’s Wikipedia page, Chocolat - Korean Girl Band
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Being monoracial or monoethnic comes with a certain kind of privelege
It is the privilege of never having to hear someone say to you/around you, “But you don’t look [race/ethnicity]”
It is the privilege of having people BELIEVE you when you say “I am [race/ethnicity]”
I HAVE THE RIGHT… Not to justify my existence in this world. Not to keep the races separate within me. Not to justify my ethnic legitimacy. Not to be responsible for people’s discomfort with my physical or ethnic ambiguity. I HAVE THE RIGHT… To identify myself differently...
The Blur of Code
I am black. Afro-American. Kinky curls, thick lips, complexion kissed by the oozing inside of Twix black. Or am I? What is black? How is the term defined in the world’s cultural melting pot, where there is no unique identifier for the Jamaican-Asian or the German-South African? In the land of milk and corporate greed, where oppression was the foundation for prosperity, where does black exist?
Read more at EvetteDionne.com...
Books on mixed race/ethnicity
Hey everyone heres a list of books you might be interested in reading.
James Brooks, ed., Confounding the Color Line: The Indian-Black Experience in North America
Jack Forbes, Africans and Native Americans: The Language of Race and the Evolution of Red-Black Peoples
Coco Fusco, English Is Broken Here: Notes on Cultural Fusion in the Americas
Martha Hodes, ed., Sex, Love, Race: Crossing Boundaries in North American History
Joanne Nagel, Race, Ethnicity, and Sexuality: Intimate Intersections, Forbidden Frontiers
Audrey Smedley, Race in North America: Origin and Evolution of a Worldview
Flashback Thursday: David Blaine
(Puerto Rican/Russian Jewish) [American]
Known as: Famous Magician, Illusionist & Endurance Artist
Special Events: “Buried Alive”, “Frozen in Time”, “Vertigo”, “Above the Below”, “Drowned Alive”, “Electrified”
TV: “Street Magic”, “Magic Man”
More Information: David Blaine’s Official Site, David Blaine’s Twitter page, David Blaine’s Facebook page, David Blaine’s Wikipedia page
Originally featured on March 13, 2011
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