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Multicultural
Resource Project
Race
& Ethnicity
Media
Resources:
- Skin deep.
Reid, F., Wood, S., & Cahill, S. (1995). [1 videocassette (54 min.)].
Berkeley, CA: Iris Films.
A diverse group
of college students reveal their honest feelings and attitudes about
race and racism. Students are interviewed alone, and then discuss
the issues in a group setting.
- The color of
fear. Lee, M. W., Hunter, M., & Stir-Fry Productions. (1994).
[1 videocassette (90 min.)]. Oakland, CA: Stir-Fry Productions.
Eight North American
men of different races talk together about how racism affects them.
- What's cooking?
Chadha, G., Chen, J., Margulies, J., Ruehl, M., Sedgwick, K., Woodard,
A., et al. (2000). [1 videodisc (109 min.)]. [United States]: Trimark
Home Video.
In Los Angeles'
Fairfax district, four households celebrate Thanksgiving amidst family
tensions. In the Nguyen family, the children's acculturation and immigrant
parents' fears collide. In the Avila family, Isabel's son has invited
her estranged husband to their family dinner. Audrey and Ron Williams
want to keep their own family's ruptures secret from Ron's visiting
mother. In the Seelig household, Herb and Ruth are unwilling to discuss
that their grown daughter is living with her lover, Carla.
- Race the power
of an illusion. Pounder, C. C. H., Adelman, L., Herbes-Sommers,
C., Strain, T. H., Smith, L. M., California Newsreel (Firm), et al.
(2003). [1 videodisc (168 min.)]. San Francisco, Calif.: California
Newsreel.
Episode one explores
how recent scientific discoveries have toppled the concept of biological
race. Episode two questions the belief that race has always been with
us. It traces the race concept to the European conquest of the Americas.
Episode three focuses on how our institutions shape and create race.
Books, Book
Chapters, & Journal Articles:
- Wijeyesinghe, C.,
& Jackson, B. W. (2001). New perspectives on racial identity development
: a theoretical and practical anthology. New York: New York University
Press.
Decades have
passed since our original theories of racial identity development
were formed, bringing with them changes in our society and in our
understandings of race and racism.
New Perspectives on Racial Identity Development seeks to update
these foundational models. The volume brings together leaders in
the field to deepen, broaden, and reassess our understandings of
racial identity development among Blacks, Latino/as, Asian Americans,
American Indians, Whites, and multiracial people.
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