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6 - Are white people ethnic? Whiteness, dominance, and ethnicity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2012

Carmen Fought
Affiliation:
Pitzer College, Claremont
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Summary

“[clear throat] Oh goodness! [clear throat]”

“What's the matter, Chance?”

“[clear throat] I don't know, Schuyler. [clear throat] I have a scratchy sensation I am not familiar with. [clear throat] I better schedule an MRI[clear throat].”

(George Lopez doing “white” characters, Right Now Right Now, 2001)

I discuss issues of racial identity, including what it means to be “white,” with my colleagues and students all the time. But my first experience with this particular concept outside the academic setting occurred when my husband and I were having dinner at a Mexican restaurant (a big chain type) near our home in Southern California. We got into a conversation with the waiter, who was European-American, on the topic of beers. My husband, for reasons known only to himself, asked, “What's the first beer you remember drinking?” The waiter answered, “Budweiser,” but he followed up with a comment that interested me. “You gotta understand,” he explained, “my family is all white people, you know? I don't mean to be racist or anything, but it's true. And that's what they drink: Budweiser, Miller Genuine Draft, or Coors.” Many things struck me about this response: his stereotyping of whites as a group, his apology and identification of the stereotype as potential racism, and his willingness to discuss issues about his family's construction of ethnicity with two total strangers.

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Chapter
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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References

Basso, Keith H. 1979. Portraits of “The Whiteman”: Linguistic Play and Cultural Symbols Among the Western Apache. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birgit, Brander Rasmussen, Nexica, Irene J., Klinenberg, Eric, and Wray, Matt, eds. 2001. The Making and Unmaking of Whiteness. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Fordham, S. and Ogbu, J.. 1986. Black students' school success: coping with the burden of acting white. Urban Review 18:176–206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ignatiev, Noel. 1995. How the Irish Became White. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Ogbu, John U. 1999. Beyond language: Ebonics, proper English, and identity in a Black-American speech community. American Educational Research Journal 36:147–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trechter, Sara and Bucholtz, Mary. 2001. White noise: bringing language into whiteness studies. Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 11(1):3–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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