1) “Negotiating Mixed Identities: Generations of mixed African Caribbean and white Londoners”.

Conference paper


Bauer, E (2017). 1) “Negotiating Mixed Identities: Generations of mixed African Caribbean and white Londoners”. The Loving Day conference on “Power, Intimacy and the State: Mixed Families in Europe and Beyond”,. University of Amsterdam and Maastricht University, NL. 12 - 13 Jun 2017
AuthorsBauer, E
TypeConference paper
Abstract

Abstract Children of mixed African-Caribbean and white British parents are currently one of one of the largest ethnic groups in Britain today. Far from denying any part of their heritage, they have fought and struggled to carve out a place in British society where they can finally be acknowledged for who they feel they are. And although identity is not always a matter of total free choice, individuals do have a certain amount of choice about how they define themselves. Thus, the mixed-parentage individuals in my research have chosen to construct their own identification, which for them, have become adequate idioms for locating themselves within the society. Through their strategic manipulations, they have made a significant step in liberating themselves from the institutional structures of “racial” categorisation that prevailed up until the 2001 census, and forced them into a “half-denial [denial of their white heritahe]” through inclusion in the “Black-Other” category of the 1991 census. They have effectively located themselves between their African-Caribbean and white British heritages, thus validating their existence, and declaring their visibility in British society. Thus, “mixed-race” individuals have chosen to be recognized as visible and responsible agents whose hopes, desires, opinions, experiences and actions matter. This paper is drawn from research on mixed African-Caribbean and white British extended families in London. It examines mixed-heritage individuals’ understanding of their social positions within their families and within the wider society, and their innovative agency in constructing and establishing their “mixed” positions in British society. Thus, it challenges the suggestion that mixed-race children experience problems arising from an ambiguous ethnicity (see for example Benson 1981).

Year2017
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Print12 Jun 2017
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Deposited08 Jun 2017
Accepted20 Apr 2017
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