Books of Racially mixed people

  • The De-Assimilation of South Carolina
    By Frank W. Sweet

    Henry M. Turner wrote about his parishioners , " the blacks were arrayed against the brown or mulattoes , and the mulattoes in turn against the blacks . " They found freedmen's religious practices alien and were appalled by the anti ...

  • Multiracial America: A Resource Guide on the History and Literature of Interracial Issues
    By Karen E. Downing, Darlene P. Nichols, Kelly Webster

    ... 163 Autographs for Freedom , 41 Avens , Alfred , 57 Black , Algernon D. , 50 Blau , Peter M. , 81 Blau's theory of ... 65 Bradley , Carla , 127 Bradman , Tony , 139 Bradshaw , Carla K. , 24 Brand - Williams , Oralandar , 24 Brandt ...

  • Beyond Black: Biracial Identity in America
    By David L. Brunsma, Kerry Rockquemore

    ... Neighbors, and Jackson, "Racial Group Identification among Black Adults"; and Patricia Gurin, Arthur H. Miller, ... Margaret Spencer, Geraldine Brookins, and Walter Allen (Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum, 1985); and Demo and Hughes, ...

  • Benjamin and the Word: Benjamin Y la Palabra
    By Daniel A. Olivas

    When Benjamin beats his friend James at handball, James calls him a name that hurts his feelings, but Benjamin's father helps him sort out his feelings and figure out why James might have used the word.

  • A River Called Heaven
    By Scotland Payne

    See why Integration is a great blessing, yet a curse in this story of young love, prejudice, sex, humor, and tragedy. Against the backdrop of all this turmoil, bigotry and racism, in North Carolina a laid back River Called Heaven flows.

  • Walking a Tightrope: Towards a Social History of the Coloured Community of Zimbabwe
    By James Muzondidya

    Focusing mainly on the process of identity formation among members of Zimbabwe's coloured community, this book challenges conventional wisdom on race and ethnic identities.

  • The Existence of the Mixed Race Damnés: Decolonialism, Class, Gender, Race
    By Daphne V. Taylor-Garcia

    Spanning the early foundations of knowledge production about colonial/racial subjects and connecting to contemporary debates on Latinxs and racialization, the book takes up the terms through which first-person perceptions of precarity and ...