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Brown (racial classification)

Brown is a racialized classification of people, usually a political and skin color-based category for specific populations with a light to moderate brown complexion.

In the age of scientific racism edit

In the 18th and 19th century, European and American writers proposed geographically based "scientific" differences among "the races". Many of these racial models assigned colors to the groups described, and some included a "brown race" as in the following:

 
Global racial map by eugenicist Lothrop Stoddard in The Rising Tide of Color Against White World-Supremacy, 1920.

These and other race theories have been dismissed scientifically. As a 2012-human biology textbook observes, "These claims of race-based taxonomy, including [Carleton] Coon's claims for homo-sapienation, have been discredited by paleontological and genomic research showing the antiquity of modern human origins, as well as the essential genomic African nature of all living human beings."[9]

Subdivisions edit

In the 19th century, the notion of a single "brown people" was sometimes superseded by multiple "brown peoples". Cust mentions Grammar in 1852 denying that there was one single "brown race", but in fact, several races speaking distinct languages.[10] The 1858 Cyclopaedia of India and of eastern and southern Asia[11] notes that Keane was dividing the "brown people" into quaternion: a western branch that he termed the Malay, a north-western group that he termed the Micronesian, and the peoples of the eastern archipelagos that he termed the Maori and the Polynesian.

Ethnic and racial identifier edit

The appellation "brown people" has been applied in the 20th and 21st centuries to several groups. Edward Telles, a sociologist of race and ethnicity, and Jack Forbes[12] both argue that this classification is biologically invalid. However, as Telles notes, it is still of sociological significance. Irrespective of the actual biological differences amongst humans, and of the actual complexities of human skin coloration, people nonetheless self-identify as "brown" and identify other groups of people as "brown", using characteristics that include skin color, hair strength, language, and culture, in order to classify them.

Forbes remarks upon a process of "lumping", whereby characteristics other than skin color, such as hair color or curliness, act as "triggers" for color categories "even when it may not be appropriate."[12][13]

Ethnicity in South Africa edit

In 1950s (and later) South Africa, the "brown people" were the Coloureds, referring to those born of multiracial sexual unions out of wedlock. They were distinct from the Reheboth Basters inhabiting Namibia, who were primarily of Khoisan and European parentage. The Afrikaans terms, which incorporate many subtleties of heritage, political agenda, and identity, are "bruin" ("brown"), "bruines" ("browns"), and "bruinmense" ("brown people"). Some South Africans prefer the appellation "bruinmense" to "Coloured".[14][15]

The South African pencil test was one example of a characteristic other than skin color being used as a determiner. The pencil test, which distinguished either "black" from "Coloured" or "Coloured" from "white", relied upon curliness and strength of hair (i.e. whether it was capable of retaining a pencil under its own strength) rather than upon any color factor at all. The pencil test could "trump skin color".[16][17]

Steve Biko, in his trial in 1976, rejected the appellation "brown people" when it was put to him incorrectly by Judge Boshoff:[18]

Boshoff: But now why do you refer to you people as blacks? Why not brown people? I mean you people are more brown than black.
Biko: In the same way as I think white people are more pink and yellow and pale than white.
Boshoff: Quite ... but now why do you not use the word brown then?
Biko: No, I think really, historically, we have been defined as black people, and when we reject the term non-white and take upon ourselves the right to call ourselves what we think we are, we have got available in front of us a whole number of alternatives ... and we choose this one precisely because we feel it is most accommodating.

Penelope Oakes[18] characterizes Biko's argument as picking "black" over "brown" because for Biko it is "the most valid, meaningful and appropriate representation, even though in an individualistic decontextualized sense it might appear wrong" (Oakes's emphasis).

This contrasts with Piet Uithalder, the fictional protagonist of the satirical column "Straatpraatjes" (whose actual author was never revealed but who is believed to have been Abdullah Abdurahman) that appeared in the Dutch-Afrikaans section of the newspaper APO between May 1909 and February 1922. Uithalder would self-identify as a Coloured person, with the column targeted at a Coloured readership, introducing himself as "een van de ras" ("a member of the race") and characterizing himself as a "bruine mens".[14]

Pardos in Brazil edit

In popular use, Brazilians also use a category of moreno m. [moˈɾenu], morena f. [moˈɾenɐ], lit. 'swarthy', from mouro, Portuguese for 'Moor', which were perceived as those with darker phenotypes than European peoples. Thus a moreno or morena is a person with a "Moorish" phenotype, which is extremely ambiguous as it can mean "dark-haired people", but is also used as a euphemism for pardo, and even "black". In a 1995 survey, 32% of the population self-identified as moreno, with a further 6% self-identifying as moreno claro ("light moreno"). 7% self-identified as "pardo".[13]

A comprehensive study presented by the Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research found that on average, 'white' Brazilians have >50% European genomic ancestry, whereas 'black' Brazilians have 17.1% European genomic ancestry. It concluded that "The high ancestral variability observed in Whites and Blacks suggests that each Brazilian has a singular and quite individual proportion of European, African and Amerindian ancestry in their mosaic genomes. Thus, the only possible basis to deal with genetic variation in Brazilians is not by considering them as members of color groups, but on a person-by-person basis, as 190 million human beings, with singular genome and life histories".[19]

Use in Canada edit

Relating to brown identity, the popular usage of the term in Canada generally refers to individuals of South Asian ancestry.[20][21][22][23][24][25]

Use in the United States edit

"Brown" has been used as a term in popular culture for some South Asian Americans, Middle Eastern Americans, Native Americans, Latino Americans, and rarely now, Southern Europeans such as Italians and Greeks, either as a pejorative term or sometimes for self-identification, as with brown identity. Judith Ortiz Cofer notes that appellation varies according to geographical location, observing that in Puerto Rico she is considered to be a "white person", but in the United States mainland, she is considered to be a "brown person".[26] Moustafa Bayoumi, an Egyptian-American professor of English at Brooklyn College, identified himself as a "brown Arab-American" in an opinion piece criticizing the United States Census for forcing self-identified brown persons to identify as white.[27]

The term "Brown American" has been used both as a pejorative and as a self-identifier in reference to Filipino Americans.[28] Furthermore, some Americans of Southeast Asian or South Asian descent have used the terms "Brown Asian" or "Brown South Asian" to distinguish themselves from East Asian Americans, who are what the term "Asian American" usually refers to in the United States.[29][30]

Brown pride edit

Brown pride is a movement primarily in the United States among Latinos to develop a positive self-image by embracing the idea of being brown as a form of pride.[31] Brown pride is a response to the racist or colorist narrative that white skin is more beautiful than brown skin.[31] Brown pride first emerged among Mexican Americans in the United States alongside the Chicano and Black is Beautiful movement in the 1960s.[31][32]

Media portrayals of brown people edit

In the United States, mainstream media has sometimes referenced brown as a racial classification that is a threat to white America and the idea of 'America' in general.[33] This has been done through rhetoric of a "brown tide" that is changing the demographic landscape of the United States, often with an underlying negative tone.[33] This may stoke racial fears of people, and particularly Latinos, who are seen as brown.[33]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Jane Desmond (2001). Staging Tourism: Bodies on Display from Waikiki to Sea World. University of Chicago Press. p. 54. ISBN 0-226-14376-7.
  2. ^ John G. Jackson (1938). Ethiopia and the Origin of Civilization: A Critical Review of the Evidence of Archaeology,... New York, N.Y.: The Blyden Society.
  3. ^ Bernasconi, Robert. Race Blackwell Publishing: Boston, 2001. ISBN 0-631-20783-X
  4. ^ Joseph-Anténor Firmin and Antenor Firmin (2002). The Equality of the Human Races. Asselin Charles (translator) and Carolyn Fluehr-Lobban (contributor). University of Illinois Press. p. 17. ISBN 0-252-07102-6.
  5. ^ Mackenzie, Donald A. Myths of Babylonia and Assyria Montana:Kessinger Publishing, 2004. ISBN 1-4179-7643-8
  6. ^ . Understanding Race.org. Archived from the original on 18 June 2013. Retrieved 13 January 2018.
  7. ^ Stoddard, Lothrop (1920). The Rising Tide of Color Against White World-Supremacy. Charles Scribner's Sons. Brown Man's Land is the Near and Middle East. The brown world stretches in an immense belt clear across southern Asia and northern Africa, from the Pacific to the Atlantic Oceans
  8. ^ A. H. Keane, A. Hingston Quiggin, A. C. Haddon (2011). Man: Past and Present. Cambridge University Press. p. 478. ISBN 978-0521234108.
  9. ^ Cameron, Noel; Barry Bogin (2012-06-08). Human Growth and Development. Academic Press. ISBN 9780123838827.
  10. ^ Robert Needham Cust (1878). A Sketch of the Modern Languages of the East Indies. Trübner & co. p. 13.
  11. ^ Edward Balfour (1976). The Encyclopaedia Asiatica, Comprising Indian Subcontinent, Eastern and Southern Asia. Cosmo Publications. p. 315.
  12. ^ a b Forbes, Jack D. (March 2, 1993). Africans and Native Americans: The Language of Race and the Evolution of Red-Black Peoples. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 9780252063213 – via Google Books.
  13. ^ a b Edward Eric Telles (2004). "Racial Classification". Race in Another America: the significance of skin color in Brazil. Princeton University Press. pp. 81–84. ISBN 0-691-11866-3.
  14. ^ a b Mohamed Adhikari (2005). Not White Enough, Not Black Enough: Racial Identity in the South African Coloured Community. Ohio University Press. pp. 26, 163–169. ISBN 0-89680-244-2.
  15. ^ Gerald L. Stone (2002). "The lexicon and sociolinguistic codes of the working-class Afrikaans-speaking Cape Peninsula coloured community". In Rajend Mesthrie (ed.). Language in South Africa. Cambridge University Press. p. 394. ISBN 0-521-53383-X.
  16. ^ David Houze (2006). Twilight People: From Mississippi to South Africa and Back. University of California Press. p. 134. ISBN 0-520-24398-6.
  17. ^ Birgit Brander Rasmussen (2001). The Making and Unmaking of Whiteness. Duke University Press. p. 133. ISBN 0-8223-2740-6.
  18. ^ a b Penelope Oakes (1996). "The Categorization Process: Cognition and the Group in the Social Psychology of Stereotyping". In W. P. (William Peter) Robinson and Henri Tajfel (ed.). Social Groups and Identities: developing the legacy of Henri Tajfe. Routledge. ISBN 0-7506-3083-3.
  19. ^ Pena, S.D.J.; Bastos-Rodrigues, L.; Pimenta, J.R.; Bydlowski, S.P. (11 September 2009). "DNA tests probe the genomic ancestry of Brazilians". Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research. 42 (10): 870–876. doi:10.1590/S0100-879X2009005000026. PMID 19738982.
  20. ^ Sumartojo, Widyarini. "My kind of Brown": Indo-Canadian youth identity and belonging in Greater Vancouver (PhD thesis) ( 2014-10-19 at the Wayback Machine).
  21. ^ Sundar, Purnima (2008). "To "Brown It Up" or to "Bring Down the Brown": Identity and Strategy in Second-Generation, South Asian-Canadian Youth" (PDF). Journal of Ethnic and Cultural Diversity in Social Work. 17 (3): 251–278. doi:10.1080/15313200802258166. S2CID 143356411.
  22. ^ Frost, Heather. Being “Brown” in a Canadian Suburb
  23. ^ Sandhu, Danielle. Theorizing Brown Identity
  24. ^ Patel, Sharmi. The Politics of Belonging: Cultural Identity Formation among Second Generation Canadians
  25. ^ "What does it mean to be brown-skinned in Canada?". July 14, 2016.
  26. ^ Pauline T. Newton (2005). "An Interview with Judith Ortiz Cofer". Transcultural Women Of Late-Twentieth-Century U.S. American Literature. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 161. ISBN 0-7546-5212-2.
  27. ^ Bayoumi, Moustafa (14 February 2019). . The Guardian. Archived from the original on 6 February 2023. Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  28. ^ Reyes, Bobby M. (May 14, 2007). "How Filipinos Came to Be Called the "Brown Americans" - MabuhayRadio". Mabuhay Radio. Retrieved March 13, 2020.
  29. ^ Schiavenza, Matt (October 19, 2016). "Why Some 'Brown Asians' Feel Left Out of the Asian American Conversation". Asia Society. Retrieved June 14, 2022. And that, unfortunately, did not include any South Asians and only one Filipino. That caused a bit of an outcry. It raises a legitimate issue, of course, one about how 'brown Asians' often feel excluded from the Asian American conversation.
  30. ^ Kulkarni, Saili S. (June 14, 2022). "South Asians Are Asians Too. When Will Our Racial Reckoning Be?". Ms. Retrieved March 24, 2022. Yet we didn't similarly rally to support the instances of Anti-Asian hate pre-COVID-19 and certainly not for Brown, South Asians.
  31. ^ a b c Tharps, Lori L. (2017-10-03). Same Family, Different Colors: Confronting Colorism in America's Diverse Families. Beacon Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-8070-7108-3.
  32. ^ Mariscal, George (2005). Brown-eyed Children of the Sun: Lessons from the Chicano Movement, 1965-1975. UNM Press. p. 129. ISBN 978-0-8263-3805-1.
  33. ^ a b c Milian, Claudia (2013-02-01). Latining America: Black-Brown Passages and the Coloring of Latino/a Studies. University of Georgia Press. pp. 101–03. ISBN 978-0-8203-4479-9.

Further reading edit

  • Alexander Winchell (1890). "XX. Genealogy of the Brown Races". Preadamites: Or, A Demonstration of the Existence of Men Before Adam. S. C. Griggs and company. xvii et seq.

brown, racial, classification, brown, skin, redirects, here, single, brown, skin, brown, racialized, classification, people, usually, political, skin, color, based, category, specific, populations, with, light, moderate, brown, complexion, contents, scientific. Brown skin redirects here For the single see Brown Skin Brown is a racialized classification of people usually a political and skin color based category for specific populations with a light to moderate brown complexion Contents 1 In the age of scientific racism 1 1 Subdivisions 2 Ethnic and racial identifier 2 1 Ethnicity in South Africa 2 2 Pardos in Brazil 2 3 Use in Canada 2 4 Use in the United States 2 4 1 Brown pride 2 4 2 Media portrayals of brown people 3 See also 4 References 5 Further readingIn the age of scientific racism editSee also Historical race concepts Scientific racism and Color terminology for race In the 18th and 19th century European and American writers proposed geographically based scientific differences among the races Many of these racial models assigned colors to the groups described and some included a brown race as in the following In the late 18th century German anthropologist Johann Blumenbach extended Linnaeus s four color race model by adding the brown race Malay race which included both the Malay division of Austronesian Southern Thailand Cambodia Indonesia Philippines Malaysia Brunei Pattani Sumatra Madagascar Formosans etc and Polynesians and Melanesians of Pacific Islands as well as Papuans and Aborigines of Australia 1 2 In 1775 John Hunter of Edinburg included under the label light brown Southern Europeans Italians the Spanish Persians Turks and Laplanders under the label brown 3 Jean Baptiste Julien d Omalius d Halloy s five race scheme differed from Blumenbach s by including Ethiopians in the brown race as well as Oceanic peoples Louis Figuier adopted and adapted d Omalius d Halloy s classification and also included Egyptians in the brown race 4 In 1915 Donald Mackenzie conceived a Mediterranean or Brown race the eastern branch of which reaches to India and the western to the British Isles and includes predynastic Egyptians and some populations of Neolithic man 5 nbsp Global racial map by eugenicist Lothrop Stoddard in The Rising Tide of Color Against White World Supremacy 1920 Eugenicist Lothrop Stoddard in his The Rising Tide of Color Against White World Supremacy 1920 mapped a brown race as native to North Africa the Horn of Africa the Caucasus partially the Near East Middle East Central Asia South Asia Southeast Asia and Austronesia Malay race 6 Stoddard s brown is one of five primary races contrasting with white black yellow and Amerindian 7 Due to what he considered the relatively close physical relationship between many populations from the Red Sea as far as India including Semites as well as Hamites Grafton Elliot Smith conceived the Brown Race as a natural extension of Giuseppe Sergi s earlier Mediterranean race concept In this popular conception the Brown Race consisted of a joint Mediterranean Hamite Semite grouping of ancestrally related peoples into which Elliot Smith included the Proto Egyptians 8 These and other race theories have been dismissed scientifically As a 2012 human biology textbook observes These claims of race based taxonomy including Carleton Coon s claims for homo sapienation have been discredited by paleontological and genomic research showing the antiquity of modern human origins as well as the essential genomic African nature of all living human beings 9 Subdivisions edit In the 19th century the notion of a single brown people was sometimes superseded by multiple brown peoples Cust mentions Grammar in 1852 denying that there was one single brown race but in fact several races speaking distinct languages 10 The 1858 Cyclopaedia of India and of eastern and southern Asia 11 notes that Keane was dividing the brown people into quaternion a western branch that he termed the Malay a north western group that he termed the Micronesian and the peoples of the eastern archipelagos that he termed the Maori and the Polynesian Ethnic and racial identifier editThe appellation brown people has been applied in the 20th and 21st centuries to several groups Edward Telles a sociologist of race and ethnicity and Jack Forbes 12 both argue that this classification is biologically invalid However as Telles notes it is still of sociological significance Irrespective of the actual biological differences amongst humans and of the actual complexities of human skin coloration people nonetheless self identify as brown and identify other groups of people as brown using characteristics that include skin color hair strength language and culture in order to classify them Forbes remarks upon a process of lumping whereby characteristics other than skin color such as hair color or curliness act as triggers for color categories even when it may not be appropriate 12 13 Ethnicity in South Africa edit Main article Coloureds In 1950s and later South Africa the brown people were the Coloureds referring to those born of multiracial sexual unions out of wedlock They were distinct from the Reheboth Basters inhabiting Namibia who were primarily of Khoisan and European parentage The Afrikaans terms which incorporate many subtleties of heritage political agenda and identity are bruin brown bruines browns and bruinmense brown people Some South Africans prefer the appellation bruinmense to Coloured 14 15 The South African pencil test was one example of a characteristic other than skin color being used as a determiner The pencil test which distinguished either black from Coloured or Coloured from white relied upon curliness and strength of hair i e whether it was capable of retaining a pencil under its own strength rather than upon any color factor at all The pencil test could trump skin color 16 17 Steve Biko in his trial in 1976 rejected the appellation brown people when it was put to him incorrectly by Judge Boshoff 18 Boshoff But now why do you refer to you people as blacks Why not brown people I mean you people are more brown than black Biko In the same way as I think white people are more pink and yellow and pale than white Boshoff Quite but now why do you not use the word brown then Biko No I think really historically we have been defined as black people and when we reject the term non white and take upon ourselves the right to call ourselves what we think we are we have got available in front of us a whole number of alternatives and we choose this one precisely because we feel it is most accommodating Penelope Oakes 18 characterizes Biko s argument as picking black over brown because for Biko it is the most valid meaningful and appropriate representation even though in an individualistic decontextualized sense it might appear wrong Oakes s emphasis This contrasts with Piet Uithalder the fictional protagonist of the satirical column Straatpraatjes whose actual author was never revealed but who is believed to have been Abdullah Abdurahman that appeared in the Dutch Afrikaans section of the newspaper APO between May 1909 and February 1922 Uithalder would self identify as a Coloured person with the column targeted at a Coloured readership introducing himself as een van de ras a member of the race and characterizing himself as a bruine mens 14 Pardos in Brazil edit Main article Pardo Brazilians In popular use Brazilians also use a category of moreno m moˈɾenu morena f moˈɾenɐ lit swarthy from mouro Portuguese for Moor which were perceived as those with darker phenotypes than European peoples Thus a moreno or morena is a person with a Moorish phenotype which is extremely ambiguous as it can mean dark haired people but is also used as a euphemism for pardo and even black In a 1995 survey 32 of the population self identified as moreno with a further 6 self identifying as moreno claro light moreno 7 self identified as pardo 13 A comprehensive study presented by the Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research found that on average white Brazilians have gt 50 European genomic ancestry whereas black Brazilians have 17 1 European genomic ancestry It concluded that The high ancestral variability observed in Whites and Blacks suggests that each Brazilian has a singular and quite individual proportion of European African and Amerindian ancestry in their mosaic genomes Thus the only possible basis to deal with genetic variation in Brazilians is not by considering them as members of color groups but on a person by person basis as 190 million human beings with singular genome and life histories 19 Use in Canada edit Relating to brown identity the popular usage of the term in Canada generally refers to individuals of South Asian ancestry 20 21 22 23 24 25 Use in the United States edit Brown has been used as a term in popular culture for some South Asian Americans Middle Eastern Americans Native Americans Latino Americans and rarely now Southern Europeans such as Italians and Greeks either as a pejorative term or sometimes for self identification as with brown identity Judith Ortiz Cofer notes that appellation varies according to geographical location observing that in Puerto Rico she is considered to be a white person but in the United States mainland she is considered to be a brown person 26 Moustafa Bayoumi an Egyptian American professor of English at Brooklyn College identified himself as a brown Arab American in an opinion piece criticizing the United States Census for forcing self identified brown persons to identify as white 27 The term Brown American has been used both as a pejorative and as a self identifier in reference to Filipino Americans 28 Furthermore some Americans of Southeast Asian or South Asian descent have used the terms Brown Asian or Brown South Asian to distinguish themselves from East Asian Americans who are what the term Asian American usually refers to in the United States 29 30 Brown pride edit Brown pride is a movement primarily in the United States among Latinos to develop a positive self image by embracing the idea of being brown as a form of pride 31 Brown pride is a response to the racist or colorist narrative that white skin is more beautiful than brown skin 31 Brown pride first emerged among Mexican Americans in the United States alongside the Chicano and Black is Beautiful movement in the 1960s 31 32 Media portrayals of brown people edit In the United States mainstream media has sometimes referenced brown as a racial classification that is a threat to white America and the idea of America in general 33 This has been done through rhetoric of a brown tide that is changing the demographic landscape of the United States often with an underlying negative tone 33 This may stoke racial fears of people and particularly Latinos who are seen as brown 33 See also editBronze racial classification Racism Discrimination based on skin color Melting potReferences edit Jane Desmond 2001 Staging Tourism Bodies on Display from Waikiki to Sea World University of Chicago Press p 54 ISBN 0 226 14376 7 John G Jackson 1938 Ethiopia and the Origin of Civilization A Critical Review of the Evidence of Archaeology New York N Y The Blyden Society Bernasconi Robert Race Blackwell Publishing Boston 2001 ISBN 0 631 20783 X Joseph Antenor Firmin and Antenor Firmin 2002 The Equality of the Human Races Asselin Charles translator and Carolyn Fluehr Lobban contributor University of Illinois Press p 17 ISBN 0 252 07102 6 Mackenzie Donald A Myths of Babylonia and Assyria Montana Kessinger Publishing 2004 ISBN 1 4179 7643 8 Early Classification of Nature Understanding Race org Archived from the original on 18 June 2013 Retrieved 13 January 2018 Stoddard Lothrop 1920 The Rising Tide of Color Against White World Supremacy Charles Scribner s Sons Brown Man s Land is the Near and Middle East The brown world stretches in an immense belt clear across southern Asia and northern Africa from the Pacific to the Atlantic Oceans A H Keane A Hingston Quiggin A C Haddon 2011 Man Past and Present Cambridge University Press p 478 ISBN 978 0521234108 Cameron Noel Barry Bogin 2012 06 08 Human Growth and Development Academic Press ISBN 9780123838827 Robert Needham Cust 1878 A Sketch of the Modern Languages of the East Indies Trubner amp co p 13 Edward Balfour 1976 The Encyclopaedia Asiatica Comprising Indian Subcontinent Eastern and Southern Asia Cosmo Publications p 315 a b Forbes Jack D March 2 1993 Africans and Native Americans The Language of Race and the Evolution of Red Black Peoples University of Illinois Press ISBN 9780252063213 via Google Books a b Edward Eric Telles 2004 Racial Classification Race in Another America the significance of skin color in Brazil Princeton University Press pp 81 84 ISBN 0 691 11866 3 a b Mohamed Adhikari 2005 Not White Enough Not Black Enough Racial Identity in the South African Coloured Community Ohio University Press pp 26 163 169 ISBN 0 89680 244 2 Gerald L Stone 2002 The lexicon and sociolinguistic codes of the working class Afrikaans speaking Cape Peninsula coloured community In Rajend Mesthrie ed Language in South Africa Cambridge University Press p 394 ISBN 0 521 53383 X David Houze 2006 Twilight People From Mississippi to South Africa and Back University of California Press p 134 ISBN 0 520 24398 6 Birgit Brander Rasmussen 2001 The Making and Unmaking of Whiteness Duke University Press p 133 ISBN 0 8223 2740 6 a b Penelope Oakes 1996 The Categorization Process Cognition and the Group in the Social Psychology of Stereotyping In W P William Peter Robinson and Henri Tajfel ed Social Groups and Identities developing the legacy of Henri Tajfe Routledge ISBN 0 7506 3083 3 Pena S D J Bastos Rodrigues L Pimenta J R Bydlowski S P 11 September 2009 DNA tests probe the genomic ancestry of Brazilians Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research 42 10 870 876 doi 10 1590 S0100 879X2009005000026 PMID 19738982 Sumartojo Widyarini My kind of Brown Indo Canadian youth identity and belonging in Greater Vancouver PhD thesis Archived 2014 10 19 at the Wayback Machine Sundar Purnima 2008 To Brown It Up or to Bring Down the Brown Identity and Strategy in Second Generation South Asian Canadian Youth PDF Journal of Ethnic and Cultural Diversity in Social Work 17 3 251 278 doi 10 1080 15313200802258166 S2CID 143356411 Frost Heather Being Brown in a Canadian Suburb Sandhu Danielle Theorizing Brown Identity Patel Sharmi The Politics of Belonging Cultural Identity Formation among Second Generation Canadians What does it mean to be brown skinned in Canada July 14 2016 Pauline T Newton 2005 An Interview with Judith Ortiz Cofer Transcultural Women Of Late Twentieth Century U S American Literature Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 161 ISBN 0 7546 5212 2 Bayoumi Moustafa 14 February 2019 I m a brown Arab American and the US census refuses to recognize me The Guardian Archived from the original on 6 February 2023 Retrieved 13 March 2020 Reyes Bobby M May 14 2007 How Filipinos Came to Be Called the Brown Americans MabuhayRadio Mabuhay Radio Retrieved March 13 2020 Schiavenza Matt October 19 2016 Why Some Brown Asians Feel Left Out of the Asian American Conversation Asia Society Retrieved June 14 2022 And that unfortunately did not include any South Asians and only one Filipino That caused a bit of an outcry It raises a legitimate issue of course one about how brown Asians often feel excluded from the Asian American conversation Kulkarni Saili S June 14 2022 South Asians Are Asians Too When Will Our Racial Reckoning Be Ms Retrieved March 24 2022 Yet we didn t similarly rally to support the instances of Anti Asian hate pre COVID 19 and certainly not for Brown South Asians a b c Tharps Lori L 2017 10 03 Same Family Different Colors Confronting Colorism in America s Diverse Families Beacon Press p 74 ISBN 978 0 8070 7108 3 Mariscal George 2005 Brown eyed Children of the Sun Lessons from the Chicano Movement 1965 1975 UNM Press p 129 ISBN 978 0 8263 3805 1 a b c Milian Claudia 2013 02 01 Latining America Black Brown Passages and the Coloring of Latino a Studies University of Georgia Press pp 101 03 ISBN 978 0 8203 4479 9 Further reading editAlexander Winchell 1890 XX Genealogy of the Brown Races Preadamites Or A Demonstration of the Existence of Men Before Adam S C Griggs and company xvii et seq Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brown racial classification amp oldid 1193733217, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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