РефератыИностранный языкLoLove And Color Essay Research Paper Is

Love And Color Essay Research Paper Is

Love And Color Essay, Research Paper


Is love colorblind?


Just three decades ago, Thurgood Marshall was only months away from appoint-


ment to the Supreme Court when he suffered an indignity that today seems not


just outrageous but almost incomprehensible. He and his wife had found their


dream house in a Virginia suburb of Washington, D.C., but could not lawfully


live together in that state: he was black and she was Asian. Fortunately for


the Marshalls, in January 1967 the Supreme Court struck down the


anti-interracial-marriage laws in Virginia and 18 other states. And in 1967


these laws were not mere leftover scraps from an extinct era. Two years


before, at the crest of the civil-rights revolution, a Gallup poll found


that 72 per cent of Southern whites and 42 per cent of Northern whites still


wanted to ban interracial marriage.


Let’s fast-forward to the present and another black-Asian couple: retired


Green Beret Lieutenant Colonel Eldrick Woods Sr. and his Thai-born wife,


Kultida. They are not hounded by the police — just by journalists desperate


to write more adulatory articles about how well they raised their son Tiger.


The colossal popularity of young Tiger Woods and the homage paid his parents


are remarkable evidence of white Americans’ change in attitude toward what


they formerly denounced as “miscegenation.” In fact, Tiger’s famously mixed


ancestry (besides being black and Thai, he’s also Chinese, white, and


American Indian) is not merely tolerated by golf fans. More than a few seem


to envision Tiger as a shining symbol of what America could become in a


post-racial age.


Interracial marriage is growing steadily. From the 1960 to the 1990 Census,


white-Asian married couples increased almost tenfold, while black-white


couples quadrupled. The reasons are obvious: greater integration and the


decline of white racism. More subtly, interracial marriages are increasingly


recognized as epitomizing what our society values most in a marriage: the


tri- umph of true love over convenience and prudence.Nor is it surprising


that white-Asian marriages outnumber black-white marriages: the social


distance between whites and Asians is now far smaller than the distance


between blacks and whites. What’s fascinating, however, is that in recent


years a startling number of nonwhites — especially Asian men and black


women — have become bitterly opposed to intermarriage.


This is a painful topic to explore honestly, so nobody does. Still, it’s


important because interracial marriages are a leading indicator of what life


will be like in the even more diverse and integrated twenty-first century.


Intermarriages show that integration can churn up unexpected racial


conflicts by spotlighting enduring differences between the races.


For example, probably the most disastrous mistake Marcia Clark made in


prosecuting O. J. Simpson was to complacently allow Johnny Cochran to pack


the jury with black women. As a feminist, Mrs. Clark smugly assumed that all


female jurors would identify with Nicole Simpson. She ignored pretrial


research indicating that black women tended to see poor Nicole as The Enemy,


one of those beautiful blondes who steal successful black men from their


black first wives, and deserve whatever they get.


The heart of the problem for Asian men and black women is that intermarriage


does not treat every sex/race combination equally: on average, it has


offered black men and Asian women new opportunities for finding mates among


whites, while exposing Asian men and black women to new competition from


whites. In the 1990 Census, 72 per cent of black-white couples consisted of


a black hus- band and a white wife. In contrast, white-Asian pairs showed


the reverse: 72 per cent consisted of a white husband and an Asian wife.


Sexual relations outside of marriage are less fettered by issues of family


approval and long-term practicality, and they appear to be even more skewed.


The 1992 Sex in America study of 3,432 people, as authoritative a work as


any in a field where reliable data are scarce, found that ten times more


single white women than single white men reported that their most recent sex


partner was black.


Few whites comprehend the growing impact on minorities of these interracial


husband-wife disparities. One reason is that the effect on whites has been


balanced. Although white women hunting for husbands, for example, suffer


more competition from Asian women, they also enjoy increased access to black


men. Further, the weight of numbers dilutes the effect on whites. In 1990,


1.46 million Asian women were married, compared to only 1.26 million Asian


men. This net drain of 0.20 million white husbands into marriages to Asian


women is too small to be noticed by the 75 million white women, except in


Los Angeles and a few other cities with large Asian populations and high


rates of inter- marriage. Yet, this 0.20 million shortage of Asian wives


leaves a high propor- tion of frustrated Asian bachelors in its wake.


Black women’s resentment of intermarriage is now a staple of daytime talk


shows, hit movies like Waiting to Exhale, and magazine articles. Black


novelist Bebe Moore Campbell described her and her tablemates’ reactions


upon seeing a black actor enter a restaurant with a blonde: “In unison, we


moaned, we groaned, we rolled our eyes heavenward . . . Then we all shook


our heads as we lamented for the 10,000th time the perfidy of black men, and


cursed trespassing white women who dared to ‘take our men.’” Like most guys,


though, Asian men are reticent about admitting any frustrations in the


mating game. But anger over intermarriage is visible on Internet on-line


discussion groups for young Asians. The men, featuring an


even-greater-than-normal-for-the-Internet concentration of cranky bachelors,


accuse the women of racism for dating white guys. For example, “This


[dating] disparity is a manifestation of a silent conspiracy by the racist


white society and self-hating Asian [nasty word for "women"] to effect the


genocide of Asian Americans.” The women retort that the men are racist and


sexist for getting sore about it. All they can agree upon is that Media


Stereotypes and/or Low Self-Esteem must somehow be at fault.


LET’S review other facts about intermarriage and how they violate


conventional sociological theories.


1. You would normally expect more black women than black men to marry whites


because far more black women are in daily contact with whites. First, among


blacks aged 20-39, there are about 10 per cent more women than men alive.


Another tenth of the black men in these prime marrying years are literally


locked out of the marriage market by being locked up in jail, and maybe


twice that number are on probation or parole. So, there may be nearly 14


young black women for every 10 young black men who are alive and unentangled


with the law. Further, black women are far more prevalent than black men in


universities (by 80 per cent in grad schools), in corporate offices, and in


other places where members of the bourgeoisie, black or white, meet their


mates.


Despite these opportunities to meet white men, so many middle-class black


women have trouble landing satisfactory husbands that they have made Terry


(Waiting to Exhale) McMillan, author of novels specifically about and for


them, into a best-selling brand name. Probably the most popular romance


advice regularly offered to affluent black women of a certain age is to find


true love in the brawny arms of a younger black man. Both Miss McMillan’s


1996 best-seller How Stella Got Her Groove Back and the most celebrated of


all books by black women, Zora Neale Hurston’s 1937 classic Their Eyes Were


Watch- ing God, are romance novels about well-to-do older women and somewhat


dangerous younger men. Of course, as Miss Hurston herself later learned at


age 49, when she (briefly) married a 23-year-old gym coach, that seldom


works out in real life.


2. Much more practical-sounding advice would be: Since there are so many


unmarried Asian men and black women, they should find solace for their


loneli- ness by marrying each other. Yet, when was the last time you saw an


Asian man and a black woman together? Black-man/Asian-woman couples are


still quite unusual, but Asian-man/black-woman pairings are incomparably


more rare.


Similar patterns appear in other contexts:


3a. Within races: Black men tend to most ardently pursue lighter-skinned,


longer-haired black women (e.g., Spike Lee’s School Daze). Yet black women


today do not generally prefer fairer men.


3b. In other countries: In Britain, 40 per cent of black men are married to


or living with a white woman, versus only 21 per cent of black women married


to or living with a white man.


3c. In art: Madame Butterfly, a white-man/Asian-woman tragedy, has been


pack- ing them in for a century, recently under the name Miss Saigon. The


greatest black-man/white-woman story, Othello, has been an endless hit in


both Shakespeare’s and Verdi’s versions. (To update Karl Marx’s dictum:


Theater always repeats itself, first as tragedy, then as opera, and finally


as farce, as seen in that recent smash, O.J., The Moor of Brentwood.) Maybe


Shakespeare did know a thing or two about humanity: America’s leading


portrayer of Othello, James Earl Jones, has twice fallen in love with and


married the white actress playing opposite him as Desdemona.


4. The civil-rights revolution left husband-wife balances among interracial


couples more unequal. Back in 1960 white husbands were seen in 50 per cent


of black-white couples (versus only 28 per cent in 1990), and in only 62 per


cent of white-Asian couples (versus 72 per cent). Why? Discrimination,


against black men and Asian women. In the Jim Crow South black men wishing


to date white women faced pressures ranging from raised eyebrows to lynch


mobs. In contrast, the relatively high proportion of Asian-man/white-woman


couples in 1960 was a holdover caused by anti-Asian immigration laws that


had prevented women, most notably Chinese women, from joining the largely


male pioneer immigrants. As late as 1930 Chinese-Americans were 80 per cent


male. So, the limited number of Chinese men who found wives in the mid


twentieth century included a relatively high fraction marrying white women.


In other words, as legal and social discrimination have lessened, natural


inequalities have asserted themselves.


5. Keeping black men and white women apart was the main purpose of Jim Crow.


Gunnar Myrdal’s landmark 1944 study found that Southern whites generally


grasped that keeping blacks down also retarded their own economic progress,


but whites felt that was the price they had to pay to make black men less


attractive to white women. To the extent that white racism persists, it


should limit the proportion of black-man/white-woman couples.


SINCE these inequalities in interracial marriage are so contrary to conven-


tional expectations, what causes them? Academia’s and the mass media’s


preferred reaction has been to ignore husband-wife disproportions entirely.

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When the subject has raised its ugly head, though, they’ve typically tossed


out arbitrary ideas to explain a single piece of the puzzle, rather than


address the entire yin and yang of black-white and white-Asian marriages.


For example, a Japanese-American poetry professor in Minnesota has written


extensively on his sexual troubles with white women. He blames the


internment of Japanese Americans during World War II. Presumably, the


similarity of frustrations of Chinese-American men is just a coincidence


caused by, say, China losing the Opium War. And the problems of Vietnamese


men stem from win- ning the Vietnam War, etc. But piecemeal rationalizations


are unappealing com- pared to a theory which might explain all the evidence.


The general pattern to be explained is: blacks are more in demand as


husbands than as wives, and vice-versa for Asians. The question is, what


accounts for it?


The usual sociological explanations for who marries whom (e.g.,


availability, class, and social approval) never work simultaneously for


blacks and Asians. This isn’t surprising because these social-compatibility


factors influence the total number of black-white or white-Asian marriages


more than the hus- band-wife proportions within intermarriages.


By emphasizing how society encourages us to marry people like ourselves,


sociologists miss half the picture: by definition, heterosexual attraction


thrives on differences. Although Henry Higgins and Colonel Pickering are so


compatible that they break into song about it (”Why Can’t a Woman Be More


like a Man?”), Higgins falls in love with Eliza Doolittle. Opposites


attract. And certain race/sex pairings seem to be more opposite than others.


The force driving these skewed husband-wife proportions appears to be


differences in perceived sexual attractiveness. On average, black men tend


to appear slightly more and Asian men slightly less masculine than white


men, while Asian women are typically seen as slightly more and black women


as slightly less feminine than white women.


Obviously, these are gross generalizations about the races. Nobody believes


Michael Jackson could beat up kung-fu star Jackie Chan or that comedienne


Margaret Cho is lovelier than Sports Illustrated swimsuit covergirl Tyra


Banks. But life is a game of probabilities, not of abstract Platonic


essences.


So, what makes blacks more masculine-seeming and Asians more


feminine-seeming? Media stereotypes are sometimes invoked. TV constantly


shows black men slam-dunking, while it seems the only way an Asian man can


get some coverage is to discover a cure for AIDS. Yet try channel-surfing


for minority women. You’ll see black women dancing, singing, joking, and


romancing. If, however, you even see an Asian woman, she’ll probably be


newscasting — not the most alluring of roles.


Conventional wisdom sometimes cites social conditioning as well. But while


this is not implausible for American-born blacks, who come from a somewhat


homogeneous culture, it’s insensitive to the diversity of cultures in which


Asians are raised. Contrast Koreans and Filipinos and Cambodian refugees and


fifth-generation Japanese-Americans. It’s not clear they have much in common


culturally other than that in the West their women are more in demand as


spouses than their men.


One reasonable cultural explanation for the sexual attractiveness of black


men today is the hypermasculinization of black life over the last few


decades. To cite a benign aspect of this trend, if you’ve followed the


Olympics on TV since the 1960s you’ve seen sprinters’ victory celebrations


evolve from genteel exercises in restraint into orgies of fist-pumping,


trash-talking black machismo. This showy masculinization of black behavior


may be in part a delayed reaction to the long campaign by Southern white


males to portray them- selves as “The Man” and the black man as a “boy.” But


let’s not be content to stop our analysis here. Why did Jim Crow whites try


so hard to demean black manhood? As we’ve seen, the chief reason was to


prevent black men from impregnating white women.


So, did all racist whites a century ago make keeping minorities away from


their women their highest priority? No. As noted earlier, the anti-Asian


immigration laws kept Asian women out, forcing many Asian immigrant


bachelors to look for white women (with mixed success). While white men were


certainly not crazy about this side effect, it seemed an acceptable


tradeoff, since they feared Asian immigrants more as economic than as sexual


competitors. But why did whites historically dread the masculine charms of


blacks more than those of Asians? Merely asking this question points out


that social conditioning is ultimately a superficial explanation of the


differences among peoples. Yes, society socializes individuals, but what


socializes society?


There are only three fundamental causes for the myriad ways groups differ.


The first is unsatisfying but no doubt important: random flukes of history.


The second, the favorite of Thomas Sowell and Jared Diamond, is differences


in geography and climate. The third is human biodiversity. Let’s look at


three physical differences between the races. 1) Asian men tend to be


shorter than white and black men. Does this matter in the mating game? One


of America’s leading hands-on researchers into this question, 7′1″,


280-pound basketball legend Wilt Chamberlain, reports that in his ample


experience being tall and strong never hurt. Biological anthropologists


confirm this, finding that tal- ler tends to be better in the eyes of most


women in just about all cultures. Like most traits, height is determined by


the interaction of genetic and social factors (e.g., nutrition). For


example, the L.A. Dodgers’ flamethrowing pitcher Hideo Nomo is listed as


6′2″, an almost unheard-of height for any Japanese man fifty years ago,


owing to the near-starvation diets of the era. While the height gap between


Japanese and whites narrowed significantly after World War II, this trend


has slowed in recent years as well-fed Japanese began bumping up against


genetic limits. Furthermore, it can be rather cold comfort to a 5′7″ Asian


who is competing for dates with white and black guys averaging 5′11″ to


hear, “Your sons will grow up on average a couple of inches taller than you,


assuming, of course, that you ever meet a girl and have any kids.” In


contrast, consider a 5′1″ Asian coed. Although she’d be happy with a 5′7″


boyfriend if she were in an all-Asian school, at UCLA she finds lots of boys


temptingly much taller than that, but few are Asian.


2. This general principle — the more racial integration there is, the more


important become physical differences among the races — can also be seen


with regard to hair length. The ability to grow long hair is a useful


indicator of youth and good health. (Ask anybody on chemotherapy.) Since


women do not go bald and can generally grow longer hair than men, most


cultures associate longer hair with femininity. Although blacks’ hair


doesn’t grow as long as whites’ or Asians’ hair, that’s not a problem for


black women in all-black societies. After integration, though, hair often


becomes an intense concern for black women competing with longer-haired


women of other races. While intellectuals in black-studies departments’


ebony towers denounce “Eurocentric standards of beauty,” most black women


respond more pragmatically. They one-up white women by buying straight from


the source of the longest hair: the Wall Street Journal recently reported on


the booming business in furnishing African-American women with “weaves” and


“extensions” harvested from the fol- licularly gifted women of China.


3. Muscularity may most sharply differentiate the races in terms of sexual


attractiveness. Women like men who are stronger than they; men like women


who are rounder and softer. The ending of segregation in sports has made


racial differences in muscularity harder to ignore. Although the men’s


100-meter dash is among the world’s most widely contested events, in the


last four Olympics all 32 finalists have been blacks of West African


descent. Is muscularity quantifiable? PBS fitness expert Covert Bailey finds


that he needs to recom- mend different goals — in terms of percentage of


body fat — to his clients of different races. The standard goal for adult


black men is 12 per cent body fat, versus 18 per cent for Asian men. The


goals for women are 7 points higher than for men of the same race. For


interracial couples, their “gender gaps” in body-fat goals correlate


uncannily with their husband-wife proportions in the 1990 Census. The goal


for black men (12 per cent) is 10 points lower than the goal for white women


(22 per cent), while the goal for white men (15 per cent) is only 4 points


lower than the goal for black women (19 per cent). This 10:4 ratio is almost


identical to the 72:28 ratio seen in the Census. This corre- lates just as


well for white-Asian couples, too. Apparently, men want women who make them


feel more like men, and vice versa for women.


Understanding the impact of genetic racial differences on American life is a


necessity for anybody who wants to understand our increasingly complex


society. For example, the sense of betrayal felt by Asian men certainly


makes sense. After all, they tend to surpass the national average in those


long-term virtues — industry, self-restraint, law-abidingness — that


society used to train young women to look for in a husband. Yet, now that


discrimination has finally declined enough for Asian men to expect to reap


the rewards for ful- filling traditional American standards of manliness,


our culture has largely lost interest in indoctrinating young women to prize


those qualities.


The frustrations of Asian men are a warning sign. When, in the names of


free- dom and feminism, young women listen less to the hard-earned wisdom of


older women about how to pick Mr. Right, they listen even more to their


hormones. This allows cruder measures of a man’s worth — like the size of


his muscles — to return to prominence. The result is not a feminist utopia,


but a society in which genetically gifted guys can more easily get away with


acting like Mr. Wrong.


George Orwell noted, “To see what is in front of one’s nose requires a con-


stant struggle.” We can no longer afford to have our public policy governed


by fashionable philosophies which insists upon ignoring the obvious. The


realities of interracial marriage, like those of professional sports, show


that diversity and integration turn out in practice to be fatal to the


reign- ing assumption of racial uniformity. The courageous individuals in


interracial marriages have moved farthest past old hostilities. Yet, they’ve


discovered not the featureless landscape of utter equality that was


predicted by progres- sive pundits, but a landscape rich with fascinating


racial patterns. Intellec- tuals should stop dreading the ever-increasing


evidence of human biodiversity and start delighting in it.

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