Dougla in the Twenty-First Century: Adding to the Mix
Dougla in the Twenty-First Century: Adding to the Mix
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Abstract
Dougla in the Twenty-First Century evaluates and theorizes how Douglas as mixed race people are categorized and accounted for in the societies in which they live. It examines how individual Douglas experience race/ethnic identities, how these identities are mediated by other social identities such as gender and class, and how they deal with the politics of identification. It explores how such identification, both by self and other, is experienced as both affirming and contentious at multiple life stages from childhood to adulthood. The text theorizes Douglas’ encounters with this, and with the force of multiple racializing discourses, deploying the concept maneuvering as a descriptive and explanatory tool to explain how they live a complex, dynamic, ongoing, enactment of agency and choice. Dougla in the Twenty-First Century, is an updated contemporary perspective from the standpoint of people who live as mixed in the Caribbean, with particular reference to Douglas in Trinidad and Tobago and to a segment of the Dougla diaspora in the United States.
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Front Matter
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1
Introduction: Adding to the Mix
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2
Defining Dougla in the Twenty-First Century: From Biracial to Multiracial
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3
Am I Mixed Enough?: Dougla and the Complications of Phenotype
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4
Maneuvering Mixedness: Interpreting Dougla in the Caribbean Diaspora
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5
Taking Sides: Maneuvering Belonging
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6
Politics of Identification: Claiming, Naming, and Maneuvering Group Memberships
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7
What Nice Hair!?: Contentious Privilege and the Embodiment of Dougla Mixedness
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8
Dougla “Fire”: Hypersexuality and Ethnoracial Stereotypes
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Conclusion: Dougla in the Twenty-First Century and Beyond
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End Matter
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