Blanqueamiento

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Blanqueamiento, or whitening, is a social, political, and economic practice used in many post-colonial countries to "improve the race" (mejorar la raza)[1] towards a supposed ideal of whiteness.[2] The term blanqueamiento is rooted in Latin America and is used more or less synonymous with racial whitening. However, blanqueamiento can be considered in both the symbolic and biological sense [3] Symbolically, blanqueamiento represents an ideology that emerged from legacies of European Colonialism, described by Anibal Quijano’s theory of Coloniality of power, which caters to white dominance in social hierarchies [4] Biologically, blanqueamiento is the process of whitening by marrying a lighter skinned individual in order to produce lighter-skinned offspring.[4]

See also

Definition

Peter Wade argues that blanqueamiento is a historical process that can be linked to nationalism. When thinking about nationalism the ideologies behind it stem from national identity which according to Peter Wade is “a construction of the past and the future”,[5] where the past is understood as being more traditional and backwards. For example, past demographics of Puerto Rico were heavily black and Indian influenced because the country partook in the slave trade and was simultaneously home to many indigenous groups. Therefore understanding blanqueamiento as it relates to modernization, modernization is then understood as a guidance in the direction away from black and indigenous roots. Modernization then happened as described by Wade as “the increasing integration of blacks and Indians into modern society, where they will mix in and eventually disappear, taking their primitive culture with them”.[5] This kind of implementation of blanqueamiento takes place in a societies that have historically always been led by ‘white’ people whose guidance would carry “the country away from its past, which began in indianness and slavery”[5] with the hopes of promoting the intermixing of bodies in order to have a predominantly white skinned society.

Blanqueamiento as related to Mestizaje

The formation of mestizaje emerged in the shift of Latin America towards multiculturalist perspectives and policies.[6] Mestizaje has been considered problematic by many U.S. scholars because it sustains racial hierarchies and celebrates blanqueamiento.[6] For example, Swanson argues that although mestizaje is not a physical embodiment of whitening, it is “not so much about mixing, as it about a progressive whitening of the population”.[7]

Another possibility when considering mestizaje as it relates to blanqueamiento, is by understanding mestizaje as a concept that encourages mixedness, but differs from the concept of blanqueamiento on the basis of the end goal for mestizaje. As Peter Wade states, “it celebrates the idea of difference in a democratic, non-hierarchical form. Rather than envisioning a gradual whitening, it holds up the general image of the mestizo in which racial, regional, and even class differences are submerged into a common identification with mixedness” [5] On the same coin, when thinking about blanqueamiento, the future goal takes up the same theme of mixing. The difference between them is that while Mestizaje glorifies the mixing of all people to reach an end goal of having a brown population, blanqueamiento has the end goal of whiteness. The outcome of mestizaje mixing would lead to “ the predominance of the mestizo” and is not “construed necessarily as (a) whitened mestizo”.[5] Most importantly however, both of these ideologies links emerging nationhood with the predominance of the mestizo or the whitened population.

Blanqueamiento and National Policy

Blanqueamiento was enacted in national policies of many Latin American countries at the turn of the 20th century. In most cases, these policies promoted European immigration as a means to whiten the population.[8]

Brazil

Blanqueamiento was circulated in national policy throughout Brazil in the late 19th and early 20th century.[9][10] Blanqueamiento policies emerged in the aftermath of the Abolition era and the beginning of Brazil’s first republic (1888-1889). In order to dilute/dissolve the black ‘race’, Brazil executed public measures to increase European immigration,[9][11] where more than 1 million Europeans arrived in São Paulo between 1890 and 1914.[12] The state and federal government funded and subsidized immigrant travels,[11] where immigrants arrived from Portugal, Spain, Italy, Russia, Germany, Austria, France and the Netherlands.[13] Claims that white blood would eventually eliminate black blood were found in accounts of immigration statistics.[13] Created in the late 19th century, Brazil’s Directoria Geral de Estatistica (DGE) has conducted demographic censuses and managed to measure the progress of whitening as successful in Brazil.[13]

Cuba

At the beginning of the 20th century, the Cuban government created immigration laws that invested more than $1 million into recruiting Europeans into Cuba in order to whiten the state.[14] High participation of blacks in independence movements threatened white elitist power and when the 1899 Census showed that more than ⅓ of Cuba’s population was colored, white migration started to gain support.[15] Political blanqueamiento began in 1902 after the U.S. occupation, where migration of “undesirables” (i.e. blacks) became prohibited in Cuba.[16] Immigration policies supported the migration of entire families. Between 1902-1907 nearly 128,000 Spaniards entered Cuba, and officially in 1906, Cuba created its immigration law that funded white migrants.[16] However, many European immigrants did not stay in Cuba and came solely for the sugar harvest, returning to their homes during the off seasons. Although some 780,000 Spaniards migrated between 1902-1931, only 250,000 stayed. By the 1920s, Blanqueamiento through national policy had effectively failed.[15]

Social Blanqueamiento

Social blanqueamiento happens in many Latin American countries and can take the form of ethnic self-identification. For example, when examining the Puerto Rican census and the different ethnic categories of the population, the self-categorization of ‘white’ became an increasing social trend despite the rich Puerto Rican history of slave trade during the 1800s. Due to the slave trade and the intermixing of bodies, the phenotypic composition of the population in Puerto Rico was dramatically impacted. “One consequence of the increase of African Slaves was a change in the racial composition of the population. The largest proportion (55.6%) of people “of Color” was recorded in 1820 and was subsequently reduced. In 1864 52.4% of the population was “white”.[17] Then as the Census continued through the decades the dramatic decrease of non-white categories became a trend. “The category of “white” remained intact and the percentage of the population it accounted for increased from 61.8% in 1899 to 80.5% in 2000. At the same time, the proportion of people classified as “nonwhite” fell from 38.2% to 19%.[17] The last decade has seen a move towards mulitculturalism and away from blanquamiento,[18] which is reflected in the 2010 census reporting the white population declining to 75.8%.[19]

Economic Blanqueamiento

Blanqueamiento can also be accomplished through economic achievement. Many scholars have argued that money has the ability to whiten, where wealthier individuals are more likely to be classified as white, regardless of phenotypic appearance.[5][20][21] It is by this changing of social status that blacks achieve blanqueamiento.[22] In his study, Marcus Eugenio Oliveira Lima showed that groups of Brazilians succeeded more when whitened.[12]

Blanqueamiento has also been seen as a way to better the economy. In the case of Brazil, immigration policies that would help whiten the nation were seen as progressive ways to modernize and achieve capitalism.[11] In Cuba, blanqueamiento policies limited economic opportunities for African descendants, resulting in their reduced upward mobility in education, property, and employment sectors.[16]

Blanqueamiento in the U.S.

Blanqueamiento in the U.S. as most evidently seen takes on the form of what would be termed racial whitening within the media. Sports entertainment is predominantly a space where the athletes are almost all black, but despite the dominance of black athletes on the court, in the sports office itself there are predominantly white men. The Kerner Commission Report that was published in 1968, singled out and criticized the sports media. The report stated, “We have found a significant imbalance between what actually happened in our cities and what the newspaper, radio, and television coverage of the riots told us happened.” [23] When attempting to address this issue of racial whitening due to the imbalance of population representation within the media, the American Society of News Editors (ASNE) created a plan to “ hire and promote enough people of color and women in its newsrooms by 2000 or sooner, to be the equivalent of the U.S. minority population.” When the plan failed to be reached by the year 2000, the ASNE then changed their year goal to be enacted by 2025. Since their first failure, there has not been much progress made in the diversification in sports media and what is “More troublesome, where the industry showed some forward progress between 1978 and 2000 toward diversity, the most recent evidence showed... black journalists declined more than 30 percent since 2001.”[23]

References

  1. Rahier, J.M. “Body politics in black and white: Senoras, Mujeres, Blanqueamiento and Miss Esmeraldes 1997-1998, Ecuador.” Ecuador, Women & Performance: a journal of feminist theory 11.1 (1999): 103-120. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/07407709908571317
  2. Hernandez, Tanya Kateri (2001). "Multiracial Matrix: The Role of Race Ideology in the Enforcement of Antidiscrimination Laws, a United States-Latin America Comparison". Cornell Law Review 87: 1093–1176. 
  3. Sawyer, M.Q., and T.S. Paschel. “‘We didn’t cross the color line, the color line crossed us’ Blackness and Immigration in the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, and the United States.” Du Bois Review 4.2 (2007): 303-315. http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayFulltext?type=1&fid=1917568&jid=DBR&volumeId=4&issueId=02&aid=1917560&bodyId=&membershipNumber=&societyETOCSession=
  4. 4.0 4.1 Montalvo, F. F., and G. E. Codina. "Skin Color and Latinos in the United States." Ethnicities 1.3 (2001): 321-41. Print.http://www.cedla.uva.nl/50_publications/pdf/revista/80RevistaEuropea/80Chaves&Zambrano-ISSN-0924-0608.pdf
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 Wade,Peter.(1993) Blackness and Race Mixture: The Dynamics of Racial Identity in Colombia. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. Series in Atlantic History and Culture
  6. 6.0 6.1 Chavez, M., and M. Zambrano. (2006) From blanqueamiento to reindigenizacion: Paradoxes of mestizaje and multiculturalism in contemporary Colombia. European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies, 80, 5-23.
  7. Swanson, K. (2007) Revanchist Urbanism Heads South: The Regulation of Indigenous Beggers and Street Vendors in Ecuador. Antipode, 39, DOI:10.1111/j.1467-8330.2007.00548.x.
  8. Andrews, G.R. Afro-Latin America 1800-2000. New York: Oxford University Press, 2004.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Agier, M. “Racism, Culture, and Black Identity in Brazil.” Bulletin of Latin American Research 14.3 (1995): 245-264. Print.
  10. Telles, E.E. Race in Another America: The Significance of Skin Color in Brazil. Princeton, NJ/Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2006. 324 pp. ISBN 978–0–691–12792–7 (pbk)
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 Jones-de Oliveira, K.F. “The Politics of Culture or the Culture of Politics: Afro-Brazilian Mobilization, 1920-1968.” Journal of Third World Sudies 20.1 (2003): 103-120.
  12. 12.0 12.1 Lima, M.E.O. “Review Essay: Race Relations and Racism in Brazil.” Culture and Psychology 13.4 (2007): 461-473. DOI: 10.1177/1354067X07082805.
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 Loveman, M. “The Race to Progress: Census Taking and Nation Making in Brazil (1870-1920).” Hispanic American Historical Review 89.3 (2009) DOI: 10.1215/00182168-2009-002.
  14. Cuba: The next revolution [Web series episode]. (2011). In Black in Latin America. Public Broadcasting Service. Retrieved from http://video.pbs.org/video/1898347038/.
  15. 15.0 15.1 de la Fuente, A. “Race, National Discourse, Politics in Cuba: An Overview.” Latin American Perspectives 25.3 (1998): 43-69.
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 Chomsky, A. “‘Barbados or Canada?’ Race, Immigration, and Nation in Early-Twentieth-Century Cuba.” Hispanic American Historical Review 80.3 (2000): 415-462.
  17. 17.0 17.1 Duany, J. (2010) “Whitening (blanqueamiento)." Puerto Rico and the American Dream. Puerto Rico and the American Dream, n.d. Web. 03 June 2013. <http://www.prdream.com/wordpress/2010/05/whitening-blanqueamiento/>.
  18. "Race and Social Division in Latin America". Encyclopaedia Brittanica. Retrieved 7 November 2013. 
  19. "2010 Census: Puerto Rico Profile". U.S. Department of Commerce Economics and Statistics Administration U.S. CENSUS BUREAU. 2011. Retrieved 7 November 2011. 
  20. Duany, J. “Neither Black nor White: The Politics of Race and Ethnicity among Puerto Ricans on the Island and in the U.S. Mainland.” Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, February 10–12, 2000.
  21. Degler, C.N. Neither Black nor White: Slavery and Race Relations in Brazil and the United States. New York: Macmillan, 1971.
  22. Golash-Boza, T. “Does Whitening Happen? Distinguishing between Race and Color Labels in an African Descended Community in Peru.” Social Problems 57.1 (2010): 138-156.
  23. 23.0 23.1 Blackstone, Kevin B. "The Whitening of Sports Media and The Coloring of Black Athletes’ Images." (2012): 215-25. Print.
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