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Philosophy and the Mixed Race Experience is a collection of essays by philosophers about the mixed race experience. Each essay is meant to represent one of three possible things: (1) what the philosopher sees as the philosopher's best work, (2) evidence of the possible impact of the philosopher's mixed race experience on the philosopher's work, or (3) the philosopher's philosophical take on the mixed race experience. The book has two primary goals: (1) to collect together for the first time the work of professional, academic philosophers who have had the mixed race experience, and (2) to bring these essays together for the purpose of adding to the conversation on the question of the degree to which factical identity and philosophical work may be related. The book also examines the possible relationship between the mixed race experience and certain philosophical positions.
Philosophy and the Mixed Race Experience is a collection of essays by philosophers about the mixed race experience. Each essay is meant to represent one of three possible things: (1) what the philosopher sees as the philosopher's best work, (2) evidence of the possible impact of the philosopher's mixed race experience on the philosopher's work, or (3) the philosopher's philosophical take on the mixed race experience. The book has two primary goals: (1) to collect together for the first time the work of professional, academic philosophers who have had the mixed race experience, and (2) to bring these essays together for the purpose of adding to the conversation on the question of the degree to which factical identity and philosophical work may be related. The book also examines the possible relationship between the mixed race experience and certain philosophical positions.
Foreword, by Linda Martín Alcoff
Editor’s Introduction: Toward a Mixed Race Theory, by Tina
Fernandes Botts
Part 1: Mixed Race Political Theory
Chapter 1: Responsible Multiracial Politics, with a new postscript,
by Ronald Robles Sundstrom
Chapter 2: Mixed Race Identity in Britain: Finding Our Roots in the
Post Racial Era, by Gabriella Beckles-Raymond
Part 2: Mixed Race Metaphilosophy
Chapter 3: Through the Looking Glass: What Philosophy Looks Like
from the Inside When You’re Not Quite There, by Marina Oshana
Chapter 4: Being and Not Being, Knowing and Not Knowing, by
Jennifer Lisa Vest
Chapter 5: A Mixed Race (Philosophical) Experience, by Tina
Fernandes Botts
Part 3: Mixed Race Ontology
Chapter 6: The Fluid Symbol of Mixed Race, by Naomi Zack
Chapter 7: On Being Mixed, by Linda Martín Alcoff
Chapter 8: Race and Ethnic Identity? by J.L.A. Garcia
Part 4: Mixed Race and Major Figures
Chapter 9: Through a Glass, Darkly: A Mixed-Race Du Bois, by Celena
Simpson
Chapter 10: German Chocolate: Why Philosophy is So Personal, by
Timothy J. Golden
Part 5: Mixed Race Ethics
Chapter 11: Who is Afraid of Racial and Ethnic Self-Cleansing? In
Defense of the Virtuous Cosmopolitan, by Jason D. Hill
Afterword, by Naomi Zack
Epilogue, by Tina Fernandes Botts
Tina Fernandes Botts is assistant professor of philosophy at California Statue University, Fresno.
In these essays, mixed-race philosophers address the impact of this
phenomenological experience on their philosophical work—analyzing,
critiquing, and reflecting on the mixed-race experience as viewed
personally, historically, socially, politically, and
philosophically. Rich insights into the nature of the 'lived
experience' of being a 'mixed person' are on display, as are
various troubling questions raised by the very existence of
mixed-race persons. Is social categorization contradictory, and
does it cause self-alienation by demanding monoracial
identification of persons who have multiple experiences and
multiple social and self ascriptions? Is race a matter of lineage,
appearance, or culture? Who decides on race and for what purpose?
Do mixed-race persons cause discomfort, threatening both the
borders of white identity and black emancipatory projects and
indigenous sovereignty? Do mixed-race persons symbolize traumatic
conquest and the slavery experience? Is mixed-race experience a way
to engage in interracial repair and open up different ways of
knowing and being? Is it the way to a new universal humanism or
virtue cosmopolitanism? This is a valuable and challenging
resource. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates
and above.
*CHOICE*
The collection adds to our awareness of the diversity of women's
lives because it emphasizes the importance of the lived experience
of its mixed race authors. By focusing on some of the
manifestations of racism in the lives of mixed race people, the
book expands our understanding of intersectional racial oppression.
Finally, the collection also offers a robust exploration of the
possibilities of a more just future.
*Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy*
Few North American philosophers and an even smaller proportion of
North Americans in general have thought deeply about the way
society labels some people as 'mixed race.' This volume includes
some of the seminal essays that established the issue as a
genuinely philosophical topic and is supplemented by new essays
where the contributors draw on their personal experience to
illuminate it further. Tina Botts' collection brings the topic
fully alive and makes it impossible to ignore.
*Robert Bernasconi, Pennsylvania State University*
This is an exciting and very important new anthology. The essays
gathered here are rigorous and provocative efforts to philosophize
about and from mixed-race experience. Bringing together a variety
of outstanding thinkers, this collection offers a diversity of
approaches to a woefully under-explored theme. It is a timely and
sophisticated intervention into a challenging set of questions and
issues. Those interested in issues of race and racism broadly, but
especially those interested in mixed-race identities and
discourses, will find this text indispensable.
*Michael Monahan, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of
Memphis*
Tempted (if light enough) to pass as white, pressured (if their
ancestry is known) to identify as black or brown or red, rejected
(all too often) as neither, while denied (perversely) the right to
claim both or all or no racial identities, mixed race people find
themselves in multiple binds that destabilize conventional
understandings of the relation between the individual and society.
Tina Botts’s path-breaking collection gives eleven mixed race
philosophers the chance to speak their minds—and they do just that,
with painful and illuminating candor, humor, a defiant
determination not to have others tell them who and what they are,
and an insistence that their distinct perspective on reality raises
deep meta-philosophical questions about the protocols of the
discipline. This book should be welcomed not only by the growing
number of Americans who claim mixed race identity, but by anyone
too smugly certain about their own supposedly contrasting “unmixed”
racial identity (which means almost everyone).
*Charles Mills, John Evans Professor of Moral and Intellectual
Philosophy, Northwestern University*
Philosophy and the Mixed Race
Experience is the leading philosophical text on the
philosophy of mixed race. Sensitive to the relations between
the social position and personal experiences of thinkers and the
insights they can bring to philosophy, this collection highlights
the perspectives of mixed race philosophers. In this volume,
Tina Botts and contributors show how mixed race experiences are
important not only for the philosophy of race and moral and
political philosophy, but for the practice of philosophy
overall.
*Elizabeth Anderson, John Dewey Distinguished University Professor
of Philosophy and Women's Studies, University of Michigan Ann
Arbor*
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