Thornton Michael C, Taylor Robert Joseph, Chatters Linda M, Forsythe-Brown Ivy
Department of Afro-American Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
School of Social Work, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA. Corresponding author.
Identities (Yverdon). 2017;24(4):493-512. doi: 10.1080/1070289X.2016.1208096. Epub 2016 Jul 13.
African American and Black Caribbean relations dominate research on interactions across black ethnic divides. Using National Survey of American Life data, we explore a different aspect of black interethnic attitudes: how close these groups feel toward Africans. African Americans and Black Caribbeans were largely similar in their feelings of closeness to Africans. For Black Caribbeans, younger and male respondents, those reporting higher levels of financial strain, living in the northeast and persons who immigrated to the United States at least 11 years ago, report feeling especially close to Africans. Being male was the only significant correlate among African Americans. The findings are discussed in relation to how race, ethnicity and national origin shape personal identities within the U.S. and their significance for intergroup perceptions. These broader issues warrant further consideration in light of assertions that race as a defining feature of American life and intergroup relations is obsolete.
非裔美国人和加勒比黑人的关系主导着关于黑人种族差异间互动的研究。利用《美国生活全国调查》的数据,我们探究了黑人族裔间态度的一个不同方面:这些群体对非洲人感觉有多亲近。非裔美国人和加勒比黑人在对非洲人的亲近感方面大体相似。对于加勒比黑人来说,年轻男性受访者、那些报告经济压力较大的人、居住在东北部的人以及至少在11年前移民到美国的人,报告称感觉与非洲人特别亲近。男性是唯一与非裔美国人有显著关联的因素。研究结果结合种族、族裔和国籍如何在美国塑造个人身份及其对群体间认知的重要性进行了讨论。鉴于有人断言种族作为美国生活和群体间关系的决定性特征已过时,这些更广泛的问题值得进一步思考。