The 2008 season of Action Speaks explored the meaning of race in our contemporary American society.
In this program: how checking multiple boxes on a survey helped redefine race in America
For the first time in the 2000 census, citizens of the United States were not asked to define themselves by checking a single ethnic box in the census. In all of the census counts through 1990, an individual's race was supposed to be indicated by checking only one of the boxes presumed to correspond to the main social racial categories. Thus, there was no allowance made for multiracial identification, although the category "other" was recognized in the 1980 and 1990 census and on many local record-keeping forms. Advocates worked throughout the 1990s to rescind this “one box” policy. This change will lead to a discussion of the demographics of hybridization and the hybridization of demographics at the turn of the 21st century in the U.S. and in the world. We will also look at the concept of race as a construct and the notion of racial purity.
Join host Marc Joel Levitt and guest panelists for some old-fashioned community exchange in the heart of downtown Providence’s arts and cultural district.
Featured Guests:
Teja Arboleda, filmmaker, television producer, director, writer and entertainer and Entertaining Diversity, Inc. Arboleda’s documentary “Crossing The Line: Multiracial Comedians” looks at the relationship between humor and race.
Noel Igantiev, professor of American history at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design. He is author of How the Irish Became White.
Kimberly McClain DaCosta, Assistant Professor of African and African American Studies and Professor of Social Studies, Department of African and African American Studies, Harvard University. Her book Making Multiracials: State, Family and Market in the Redrawing of the Color Line examines how multiracialism emerged as a topic of public discussion in the last quarter century, and how “multiracial” became a recognizable social category and mode of identification.
Maureen T. Reddy, Department of English, Rhode Island College. She has written extensively about race. Her books include Traces, Codes, and Clues: Reading Race in Crime Fiction, Crossing the Color Line: Race, Parenting, and Culture, and Traces, Codes and Clues: Reading Race in Crime Fiction.
More from Action Speaks
1971 Powell Memo
(53:29)
From: Action Speaks
A call to arms to protect business from the anti-capitalist rhetoric of the 1960s.
1944 FDR's Second Bill of Rights Speech
(53:29)
From: Action Speaks
Can and should the government guarantee economic security?
1908 Lewis Hine Documents Child Labor
(53:29)
From: Action Speaks
The camera, exposing social problems or becoming one?
1992 Invasion of the Body Scanner
(53:29)
From: Action Speaks
Surveillance in America—needed or nightmare?
1965 Griswold v. Connecticut
(53:29)
From: Action Speaks
Contraception as a right of privacy? The Supreme Court say, ‘Yes’!
1936 Chaplin's 'Modern Times' Debuts
(53:30)
From: Action Speaks
Factories closed; unions ignored; the Tramp asks, ‘What’s Next’? Chaplin previews a world beyond the factory and unionism where one’s identity is as fragile as one’s last ...
1992 First Critical Mass Ride
(53:31)
From: Action Speaks
Bicyclists take to the streets en mass in a fight over the ‘right to the city’.
1980 Diamond v. Chakrabarty
(53:30)
From: Action Speaks
The Supreme Court case that helped put a ‘for sale’ sign on our genes.
1981: President Reagan Fires Air Traffic Controllers
(58:59)
From: Action Speaks
A Shot Over the Bow Thirty Years Ago Lands Today in Wisconsin and Elsewhere
1971: 'An American Family'; Our First Reality TV Show
(58:59)
From: Action Speaks
What's Real? What's Not? Does Anybody Care?
Piece Description
The 2008 season of Action Speaks explored the meaning of race in our contemporary American society.
In this program: how checking multiple boxes on a survey helped redefine race in America
For the first time in the 2000 census, citizens of the United States were not asked to define themselves by checking a single ethnic box in the census. In all of the census counts through 1990, an individual's race was supposed to be indicated by checking only one of the boxes presumed to correspond to the main social racial categories. Thus, there was no allowance made for multiracial identification, although the category "other" was recognized in the 1980 and 1990 census and on many local record-keeping forms. Advocates worked throughout the 1990s to rescind this “one box” policy. This change will lead to a discussion of the demographics of hybridization and the hybridization of demographics at the turn of the 21st century in the U.S. and in the world. We will also look at the concept of race as a construct and the notion of racial purity.
Join host Marc Joel Levitt and guest panelists for some old-fashioned community exchange in the heart of downtown Providence’s arts and cultural district.
Featured Guests:
Teja Arboleda, filmmaker, television producer, director, writer and entertainer and Entertaining Diversity, Inc. Arboleda’s documentary “Crossing The Line: Multiracial Comedians” looks at the relationship between humor and race.
Noel Igantiev, professor of American history at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design. He is author of How the Irish Became White.
Kimberly McClain DaCosta, Assistant Professor of African and African American Studies and Professor of Social Studies, Department of African and African American Studies, Harvard University. Her book Making Multiracials: State, Family and Market in the Redrawing of the Color Line examines how multiracialism emerged as a topic of public discussion in the last quarter century, and how “multiracial” became a recognizable social category and mode of identification.
Maureen T. Reddy, Department of English, Rhode Island College. She has written extensively about race. Her books include Traces, Codes, and Clues: Reading Race in Crime Fiction, Crossing the Color Line: Race, Parenting, and Culture, and Traces, Codes and Clues: Reading Race in Crime Fiction.




