After Hybridity The Biological Life of the Mixed Race Child

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Maile Aihua Young

Abstract

This article tracks the biological life of the mixed race Asian American child: an uncomfortable attachment to a biological notion of race that manifests for the multiracial subject at odds with models of race as a social construction. I argue that renderings of the mixed race child as a metaphor for assimilation and multicultural progress obscure how racial science continues to shape the very definition of mixed raceness. Instead, I frame the mixed race Asian American child as hybrid matter to explore the slippages between their figuration and other abnormally reproduced objects: the genetically modified food organism and cancer. In framing the mixed race child as biologically reproduced, I account for the mixed race child’s fraught relationship to the family structure, and the negative feelings that accompany the future the mixed race Asian American child is asked to hold.    

Article Details

Section
Racial Matters of Asian/America

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