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Race and Multiraciality in Brazil and the United States
Converging Paths?

By G. Reginald Daniel

384 pages | 6 x 9 | 2006

ISBN 978-0-271-02883-5 | cloth: $61.00 sh

ISBN 978-0-271-03288-7 | paper: $25.00 sh


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"Daniel's book is a careful and convincingly argued exposition on race and race mixture in the USA and Brazil. Broad in scope, impressive in detail, with a bold and compelling thesis. This book brings clarity to the comparative analysis of race in the USA and Brazil and offers a richly theoretical argument about divergent trends in patterns of racialization in the two nations. At a time when scholars of race in the USA can no longer afford to ignore the nation with largest population of African descent in the Americas, G Reginald Daniel's book will be essential reading for scholars and students alike " —Stephen Small, Associate Professorand Chair, African American Studies, UC, Berkeley

Race and Multiraciality in Brazil and the United States extends our current and historical understandings of the topic beyond the United States and takes readers to a country in which multiracialism has long been an important component of national identity. Reginald Daniel’s extensive knowledge of both cases along with his skillful comparison of the two adds theoretical depth to the emerging debates around race and multiracialism.” —Edward Telles, UCLA, author of Race in Another America: The Significanceof Skin Color in Brazil

Although both Brazil and the United States inherited European norms that accorded whites privileged status relative to all other racial groups, the development of their societies followed different trajectories in defining white/black relations. In Brazil pervasive miscegenation and the lack of formal legal barriers to racial equality gave the appearance of its being a “racial democracy,” with a ternary system of classifying people into whites (brancos), multiracial individuals (pardos), and blacks (pretos) supporting the idea that social inequality was primarily associated with differences in class and culture rather than race. In the United States, by contrast, a binary system distinguishing blacks from whites by reference to the “one-drop rule” of African descent produced a more rigid racial hierarchy in which both legal and informal barriersoperated to create socioeconomic disadvantages for blacks.

But in recent decades, Reginald Daniel argues in this comparative study, changes have taken place in both countries that have put them on “converging paths.” Brazil’s black consciousness movement stresses the binary division between brancos and negros to heighten awareness of and mobilize opposition to the real racial discrimination that exists in Brazil, while the multiracial identity movement in the U.S. works to help develop a more fluid sense of racial dynamics that was long felt to be the achievement of Brazil’sternary system.

Against the historical background of race relationsin Brazil and the U.S. that he traces in Part I of the book, including a reviewof earlier challenges to their respective racial orders, Danielfocuses in Part II on analyzing the new racial project on whicheach country has embarked, with attention to all the political possibilities and dangers they involve.


G. Reginald Daniel is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Santa Barbara. His previous publications include More than Black? Multiracial Identity and the New Racial Order (2001).

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Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction

Part I. The Historical Foundation

1 Eurocentrism: Racial Formation and the Master Racial Project
2 The Brazilian Path: The Ternary Racial Project
3 The Brazilian Path Less Traveled: Contesting the Ternary Racial Project
4 The U.S. Path: The Binary Racial Project
5 The U.S. Path Less Traveled: Contesting the Binary Racial Project

Part II. Converging Paths

6 A New U.S. Racial Order: The Demise of Jim Crow Segregation
7 A New Brazilian Racial Order: A Decline in the Racial Democracy Ideology
8 The U.S. Convergence: Toward the Brazilian Path
9 The Brazilian Convergence: Toward the U.S. Path

Epilogue: The U.S. and Brazilian Racial Orders: Changing Points of Reference
Notes
References
Index
ContentsPreface
Acknowledgments
Introduction

Part I. The Historical Foundation

1 Eurocentrism: Racial Formation and the Master Racial Project
2 The Brazilian Path: The Ternary Racial Project
3 The Brazilian Path Less Traveled: Contesting the Ternary Racial Project
4 The U.S. Path: The Binary Racial Project
5 The U.S. Path Less Traveled: Contesting the Binary Racial Project

Part II. Converging Paths

6 A New U.S. Racial Order: The Demise of Jim Crow Segregation
7 A New Brazilian Racial Order: A Decline in the Racial Democracy Ideology
8 The U.S. Convergence: Toward the Brazilian Path
9 The Brazilian Convergence: Toward the U.S. Path

Epilogue: The U.S. and Brazilian Racial Orders: Changing Points of Reference
Notes
References
Index