On being a white person of color: Using autoethnography to understand Puerto Ricans' racialization

This article uses autoethnography to make larger conceptual/theoretical points about racial/ethnic identity categories for Puerto Ricans in the United States. I utilize Puerto Rican-ness to illustrate the limitations of U.S. "race" and ethnic constructs by furthering racialization analyses...

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Veröffentlicht in:Qualitative sociology 2004-07, Vol.27 (2), p.179-203
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description This article uses autoethnography to make larger conceptual/theoretical points about racial/ethnic identity categories for Puerto Ricans in the United States. I utilize Puerto Rican-ness to illustrate the limitations of U.S. "race" and ethnic constructs by furthering racialization analyses with seemingly contradictory categories such as "white" and "people of color." I contrast personal experiences to those of racial/ethnic classificatory systems, the American imagery of Puerto Ricans, and simplistic, political identifications. Travel, colonial relations, intra-ethnic coalitional possibilities, and second-class citizenship are all aspects that expand on the notion of racialization as classically utilized in sociology and the social sciences. Although this is not a comparative study, I present differences between racial formation systems in Puerto Rico and the U.S. in order to make these points.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
doi_str_mv 10.1023/B:QUAS.0000020692.05355.6e
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source SpringerNature Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Colonialism
Colour
Cultures and civilizations
Ethnic Identity
Ethnic relations. Racism
Ethnicity
Ethnography
Ethnology
Hispanic people
Politics
Puerto Rican Americans
Puerto Ricans
Puerto Rico
Race
Racial identity
Racial Relations
Racism
Sociology
Stereotypes
U.S.A
United States of America
title On being a white person of color: Using autoethnography to understand Puerto Ricans' racialization
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