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Marcia Dawkins

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TIME to Think in Full Color About Race & Ethnicity

Posted: 02/27/2012 7:15 am

TIME Mag 0224 cover Colorlines


TIME Magazine's latest cover story (Feb. 2/24) is called "Yo Decido. Why Latinos will pick the next President." It reports that about 9% of all voters in 2012 will be Latino, up 26% from four years ago. While the Latino vote is definitely interesting, the most interesting thing about this story isn't the headline or the article's statistics. It's the cover.

The cover claims to feature 20 portraits of Latinos with captions. Some are individual or occupational descriptions like dancer, DREAMer, nutrition undergrad, car aficionado and immigration activist. Other descriptions are nationality-oriented, like Mexicans, Hondurans and Guatemalans.

Here's the problem: In reality, the cover features only 19 portraits of Latinos and one man who passes as Latino but actually identifies himself as multiracial -- half Chinese and half white. According to Michelle Woo at the OC Weekly, "That man is Michael Schennum, is the short-haired gentleman in the top row, center, behind the letter 'M.' He is half Chinese and half white. Not Latino. Not even a little bit."

After Woo's revelation Colorlines magazine did some more digging and found that "The best part is Schennum, who is a staff photographer for The Arizona Republic, says 'they never told me what it was for or [asked] if I was Latino.'" Representatives from TIME allegedly identified Schennum as Latino based on his appearance and snapped his photo without giving him the opportunity to identify himself.

After Schennum called TIME "out," the magazine made a statement apologizing for the mistake on its February 24th cover. Representatives from the magazine said that "Over the course of three days TIME photographed 151 people for the current cover. We took steps to ensure that everyone self-identified as Latino, that they are registered voters and that they would be willing to answer our questions. If there was a misunderstanding with one of our subjects, we apologize."

TIME's apology and story then spread like wildfire within Latino and multiracial communities on social networking sites like Twitter (see below). As a result, an opportunity for thinking and talking about racial and ethnic identities in new ways has been created.

For the record, this image was produced and marketed carelessly. But it's equally careless for us to read this story without paying attention to some very real differences between racial and ethnic identities, profiling and politicking in the US today. To begin with we need to make clear that race is a symbolic social construct. That means it's a way of thinking based on shifting categories that we try to pin down based on physical appearance. While race has been made meaningful in predominantly black and white terms, social forces like immigration and intermarriage - while not societal cure alls -- do reveal the need for us to think differently about race today. Is That Your Child blogger and activist Michelle Clark challenges us to update our paradigm by thinking in "full color."

Full color thinking means that we need to understand the difference between race and ethnicity. While race is a construct, ethnicity is has more to do with national origins, language and cultural practices from a particular place. In the case of TIME's cover failure to understand that difference led to a case of mistaken identity. Hopefully this case of mistaken identity can teach us that Latinos are less easily identified by appearance and more easily identified by statements they make about values and origins.

Full color thinking also means that we need to understand the racial side of things with more nuance and sensitivity. When discussing the multiracial demographic we need to understand how it too is enabled and constrained by racial thinking. Sociologists have identified two patterns emerging in multiracial communities. Asian /Whites and Latino / Whites tend to acknowledge and celebrate all aspects of their backgrounds but live life as Whites, especially if their fathers are White. Black / Whites and Black / Asian, Black / Latinos tend to celebrate all aspects of their backgrounds but live their lives as Black. These lifestyle patterns not only respond to how these multiracials are perceived but also have to do with the way intermarriage works and the way racial identities have been defined historically by law and social custom. Of course, even these new trends fail to account for an increasingly "full color" global perspective including the experiences of those who don't identify as either White or Black -- like Cuban / Chinese, Palestinian / Panamanian or Native American / Jewish.

Although the press often talks about Latinos as if they are only a race, we must understand that in the US they constitute an ethnicity that also identifies in racial terms. And we must note that each individual Latino may identify differently from everyone else in the ethnic group, including members of his or her own family. This suggests that, as with multiracials, what's most important about Latinos is that they call into question the Black and White racial categories we tend to think of as obvious and stable. So, when a case of mistaken identity like Schennum's comes up we are able to see how unreliable appearance is as a form of identification. And we also see how all the groups we now think of in racial or multiracial terms were once ethnicities as well.

 

Follow Marcia Dawkins on Twitter: www.twitter.com/drdawkins09

 
 
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12:49 PM on 02/29/2012
There is no 'Latino race'. In fact, the concept of race is mostly b.s., but in the United States it does refer to some cultural and ancestral groups, so while it is b.s. it is at least structured b.s. 'Latino' means only that the persons or their ancestors derive from a Latin-American country. Could be any ethnicity, culture, ancestry, and means little or nothing about an individual.
07:53 AM on 02/29/2012
I guess they should have asked him how many times Joe Arpaio's thugs stop him for walking while looking Latino and then double check with ICE to see how many times he's been deported for being a citizen while looking illegal. Some place we have here. Ironic that he is a photographer with an Arizona publication.
11:59 AM on 02/28/2012
I find it interesting that the multiracial identifying man is pictured as passing for Latino when anyone can pass for Latino. It alludes to the idea that there is a specific look that Latinos have, and that is not true.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BiggpussJr
pissin em off one comment at a time.
11:13 AM on 02/28/2012
So, when a case of mistaken identity like Schennum's comes up we are able to see how unreliable appearance is as a form of identification. And we also see how all the groups we now think of in racial or multiracial terms were once ethnicities as well.

No truer statement has been made on this subject.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlairCase
12:08 PM on 02/27/2012
An editor need to correct the sentence that reads: "It reports that about 9% of all voters in 2012 will be Latino, up 26% from four years ago." How can 9% be up from 29%? I think the author meant to write "9% of all voters in 2012 will be Latinio, up 6% from four years ago." Latinos make up about 16% of the U.S. population.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dtairtime
It is what it is
12:13 PM on 02/28/2012
Actually I think they have their "estimate" of the next election correct in math terms but likely incorrect on how many latinos will vote.

They were about 7% in the last presidential election. If you add another 26% to that or about 2% more you get the 9% total.

But I highly doubt they will get those numbers - more likely about 8%. Given that it means they will make up 1% or at most 2% of the total voters in this election their power as a homogeneous group is far from huge. Many seem to think that once latinos make up enough of the voting block they will then be able to steer our immigration policies to favor them more then we already do (keep in mind they are BY FAR the most favored group now and in the history of this country).

Bottom line - if their voting power ever reaches the point where they, plus the chambers of commerce supporters for low wages and massive immigration are the majority there will be no more borders with hispanic nations.

Even though we have had 7 amnesties that all favor hispanics heavily there will be continual rolling ones for them. That is their desire and they are quite clear on that point in news story after news story. They call it other names but the end result is the same - the massive overpopulation and thus the end of this country as we know it.
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11:04 AM on 02/27/2012
That is why Latinos pose such a challenge to the United States--they defy the facile categories that it has grown accustomed to when talking/thinking about race. But, I totally agree w/you that it's high time the mainstream media get its act in gear in terms of developing a more nuanced and sophisticated way of writing about these issues. That might help the culture at large move in that direction too. It's all way long overdue.