INVESTIGADORES
GELER Lea Natalia
capítulos de libros
Título:
Mixed race in Argentina: Concealing Mixture in the "White" Nation
Autor/es:
GELER, LEA; RODRÍGUEZ, MARIELA EVA
Libro:
The Palgrave International Handbook of Mixed Racial and Ethnic Classification
Editorial:
Palgrave
Referencias:
Año: 2020; p. 179 - 194
Resumen:
In Argentina, race has been an elusive concept and a changing category. During the nation-building process of the 19th century, ruling elites implemented policies to achieve an ideal White-European national citizenry. The European migrants who arrived in great numbers between the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century were thought to ?improve? the pre-existing population comprised of Blacks, Indians, Spaniards, and their mixtures. Through overlapping processes of racialization and ethnicization framed in a settler colonialism process, Argentineans developed two types of mixing ideologies: ?whitening,? considered a positive process, and mestizaje (mixture). Unlike other Latin American countries where mestizaje and the Mestizo were celebrated by national elites, these terms carried a negative charge in Argentina, as they named the ?undesirable? mixed (non-White) people. The permanence of the whitening ideology explains why mixed race categories are still not included in the National Census. Even though Argentina represents itself as a ?raceless? republic, the racialization of the social class structure and the ethnicization of race made racial classifications to continue in existence, under different names. As such, mixed race categories?comprising racial, ethnic and social meanings?found their way through alternative channels.