how is race symbolically created??
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The development of symbolic ethnicity, as a sociological phenomenon, is attributed to mainly to ethnic European immigrants of second and subsequent generations, because "Black, Hispanic, Asian and Indian Americans do not have the option of a symbolic ethnicity, at present, in the United States"; a socio-economic ...
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ANSWER:- 1. Here, race is described as a social construct based on physical characteristics (e.g., black, white, or Asian), while ethnicity—also a social construct—refers to groups having a common culture and/or history (e.g. Irish, Haitian).
2. On sometimes, racialized concepts are used to establish ethnicities. Although "Hispanic/Latino" is listed as an ethnic group on the US Census since it include people of many different races, often Americans refer to it as a race.
3. White women and black men, both free and enslaved, engaged in sexual relations during this time, though these unions were probably much less common (Kennedy 2003).
4. This could be problematic because respondents might label a parent as black even though they are actually multiracial.
Throughout, the phrases "black," "white," "multiracial," and "biracial" are employed.
2. On sometimes, racialized concepts are used to establish ethnicities. Although "Hispanic/Latino" is listed as an ethnic group on the US Census since it include people of many different races, often Americans refer to it as a race.
3. White women and black men, both free and enslaved, engaged in sexual relations during this time, though these unions were probably much less common (Kennedy 2003).
4. This could be problematic because respondents might label a parent as black even though they are actually multiracial.
Throughout, the phrases "black," "white," "multiracial," and "biracial" are employed.
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