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January 2, 2009
Just Released, What Comes Naturally: Miscegenation Law and the Making of Race in America
In What Comes Naturally (Oxford UP, December 2008), Peggy Pascoe demonstrates how U.S. miscegenation laws were enacted and applied not just in the South but throughout most of the country, in the West, the North, and the Midwest. Beginning in the Reconstruction era, when the term miscegenation first was coined, she traces the creation of a racial hierarchy that bolstered white supremacy and banned the marriage of Whites to Chinese, Japanese, Filipinos, and American Indians as well as the marriage of Whites to Blacks. She ends not simply with the landmark 1967 case of Loving v. Virginia, in which the Supreme Court finally struck down miscegenation laws throughout the country, but looks at the implications of ideas of colorblindness that replaced them. [JH]
January 2, 2009 in New Publications | Permalink
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