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This paper examines the impact of everyday racism on mixed-race identities in Belgium with regards to differences in experiences based on gender identity. The findings of this study are compared to US-American and British literature, in order to contribute to a global understanding of race relations.
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This is the first in-depth examination of “half-Japanese” girls in Japan focusing on ethnic, gendered and embodied ‘hybrid’ identities. Challenging the myth of Japan as a single-race society, these girls are seen struggling to positively manoeuvre themselves and negotiate their identities into positions of contestation and control over marginalizing discourses which disempower them as ‘others’ within Japanese society as they begin to mature. Paradoxically, at other times, within more empowering alternative discourses of ethnicity, they also enjoy and celebrate cultural, symbolic, social and linguistic capital which they discursively create for themselves as they come to terms with their constructed identities of “Japaneseness”, “whiteness” and “halfness/doubleness”. This book has a colourful storyline throughout - narrated in the girls’ own voices - that follows them out of childhood and into the rapid physical and emotional growth years of early adolescence.
Identity (Psychology) --- Racially mixed children --- Language and culture --- Culture and language --- Culture --- Children of interracial marriage --- Children --- Racially mixed people --- Personal identity --- Personality --- Self --- Ego (Psychology) --- Individuality --- Social aspects --- Ethnic identity. --- Constructed identities . --- Discourse analysis. --- Ethnicity. --- Gender. --- Half-Japanese girls. --- Hybrid identities . --- Hybrid identity construction. --- Identity construction. --- Japaneseness. --- Mixed-race identities. --- Multiethnicity. --- Whiteness. --- Multiracial children
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"Mixed-Race Superheroes examines representations of racial mixedness, literal, metaphorical, and symbolic, that take on, challenge, or complicate the stereotypes and romanticization of mixed-race identities and the idea of the superhero. Racial mixedness has long been associated with weakness, abnormality, impurity, transgression, shame, and various pathologies on the one hand, while also ironically connoting genetic superiority, exceptional beauty/physicality and unique potential. In contemporary discussions, this romanticization of racial mixedness is linked to the idea of the mixed-race individual as a kind of savior figure who has unique abilities to free us from racial tensions and divisions. While racial mixedness is now sometimes viewed as a superpower in itself, the origins of superhero stories are much more substantively rooted in the opposed rhetoric and practice of racial purity and white supremacy. In short, racial mixedness and superheroes are both historically and currently linked"--
Comic books, strips, etc. --- Racially mixed people in literature. --- Superheroes in literature. --- Racially mixed people --- Passing (Identity) in literature. --- History and criticism. --- Race identity --- Mulattoes in literature --- racial mixedness, race, mixed-race, White Supremacy, Mixed-Race Intersections, Multi-Ethnic Mixedness, Anti-Utopian, Spider-Man, Thor, Flash, Decolonial Hybridity, The Hulk, Afro-Rican Visibility, Spider-Verse, Double Consciousness of Miles Morales, Miscegenation, mixed-race identities, superheroes, racial purity, Sika A. Dagbovie-Mullins, Jasmine Mitchell, casting, cast, Tessa Thompson, Mutations, Legion, Doctor Fate, Into to the Spider-Verse. --- Literature
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