Question

"Navigating Interracial Borders: Black-White Couples and their Social Worlds," Erica Chito Childs
Erica Chito Childs examines the experiences and challenges that Black/White couples face within their families and communities. Although interracial relationships and marriages are often viewed as a sign of improving race relations, she argues that these relationships are often met with opposition from both White and Black communities. She examines the discourse that families use when discussing their feelings and beliefs about interracial relationships. She finds, for example, that White families often pose their opposition to Black/White marriage in non-racial terms and stress that they are "concerned" for how difficult society would make life for the child who is involved interracially. In contrast to White families, Black families emphasize the importance of "marrying Black" to their children and explicitly identify race as an issue. Her conclusion is that because interracial couples exist in, what she terms, a "borderland" between Black and White, her examination of interracial couples offers much to our understanding contemporary race relations. The beliefs expressed by the both the Black and White families illustrate the centrality of race in constructing families and identities and, particularly, the social construction of race.
When Childs asked White respondents why their families would oppose them being involved
in an interracial relationship, many of the participants cited _______________ as the reason why they and/or their family personally would prefer that their family not become involved interracially.
a. "opposition of the larger society"
b. "personal prejudices"
c. "previous personal experience"
d. "mistrust"

Answer

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