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Blasian Invasion - Racial Mixing in the Celebrity Industrial Complex (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,048
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Blasian Invasion - Racial Mixing in the Celebrity Industrial Complex (Paperback)
Series: Race, Rhetoric, and Media Series
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Myra S. Washington probes the social construction of race through
the mixed-race identity of Blasians, people of Black and Asian
ancestry. She looks at the construction of the identifier Blasian
and how this term went from being undefined to forming a
significant role in popular media. Today Blasian has emerged as not
just an identity Black/Asian mixed-race people can claim, but also
a popular brand within the industry and a signifier in the culture
at large. Washington tracks the transformation of Blasian from
being an unmentioned category to a recognized status applied to
other Blasian figures in media. Blasians have been neglected as a
meaningful category of people in research, despite an extensive
history of Black and Asian interactions within the United States
and abroad. Washington explains that even though Americans have
mixed in every way possible, racial mixing is framed in certain
ways, which almost always seem to involve Whiteness.
Unsurprisingly, media discourses about Blasians mostly conform to
usual scripts already created, reproduced, and familiar to
audiences about monoracial Blacks and Asians. In the first book on
this subject, Washington regards Blasians as belonging to more than
one community, given their multiple histories and experiences.
Moving beyond dominant rhetoric, she does not harp on defining or
categorizing mixed race, but instead recognizes the multiplicities
of Blasians and the process by which they obtain meaning.
Washington uses celebrities, including Kimora Lee, Dwayne Johnson,
Hines Ward, and Tiger Woods, to highlight how they challenge and
destabilize current racial debate, create spaces for themselves,
and change the narratives that frame multiracial people. Finally,
Washington asserts Blasians as evidence not only for the fluidity
of identities, but also for the limitations of reductive racial
binaries.
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