Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Revisiting “Color Names and Color Notions”
View through CrossRef
Employing the pioneering work of Charles Parrish as a basis of comparison, this study serves as a follow-up to “Color Names and Color Notions” by deconstructing the contemporary language and attitudes surrounding skin color. Nine focus groups with 58 black women between the ages of 18 and 25 reveal that the color names and color notions offered were consistent with many of the terms and stereotypes that Parrish found, thereby indicating that there has been no change in colorist ideology among African Americans. Participants discussed 40 color names regularly employed to describe light, medium, and dark skin tones. The terms and attitudes associated with light skin tones were generally negative; conversely, the terms and attitudes associated with dark skin tones were derogatory. The language and beliefs connected to medium skin tones indicate that colorism operates as a three-tiered structure rather than the traditionally situated binary paradigm.
Title: Revisiting “Color Names and Color Notions”
Description:
Employing the pioneering work of Charles Parrish as a basis of comparison, this study serves as a follow-up to “Color Names and Color Notions” by deconstructing the contemporary language and attitudes surrounding skin color.
Nine focus groups with 58 black women between the ages of 18 and 25 reveal that the color names and color notions offered were consistent with many of the terms and stereotypes that Parrish found, thereby indicating that there has been no change in colorist ideology among African Americans.
Participants discussed 40 color names regularly employed to describe light, medium, and dark skin tones.
The terms and attitudes associated with light skin tones were generally negative; conversely, the terms and attitudes associated with dark skin tones were derogatory.
The language and beliefs connected to medium skin tones indicate that colorism operates as a three-tiered structure rather than the traditionally situated binary paradigm.
Related Results
Place-names from hām, distinguished from hamm names, in relation to the settlement of Kent, Surrey and Sussex
Place-names from hām, distinguished from hamm names, in relation to the settlement of Kent, Surrey and Sussex
The element OE hām, ‘a village, a village community, an estate, a manor, a homestead’, is generally reckoned to belong to an early stratum of English place-names. Within this strat...
Noordnederlandse majolica: kast opruimen
Noordnederlandse majolica: kast opruimen
AbstractThis article has been prompted by two recent works on the subject, the new and greatly expanded version published in 1981 of Nederlandse majolica by Dingeman Korf, a pionee...
Mermaids, Mere-Maids and No Maids: Mermaid place names and folklore in Britain
Mermaids, Mere-Maids and No Maids: Mermaid place names and folklore in Britain
Fifty mermaid place names relating to landscape features have been identified in Britain (including the Isle of Man). The names are attested from the 16th to the 21st Century: some...
The Chaldean Stones in the Lapidary of Alfonso X
The Chaldean Stones in the Lapidary of Alfonso X
Among the names of stones in the Alfonsine lapidaries are a number, frequently recurring, which are given in the manuscript as Chaldean names, and are usually followed by their equ...
Using Colors with Disease Names in Kazakh Turkish
Using Colors with Disease Names in Kazakh Turkish
Color names have a special place in the rich vocabulary of the Turkish language. Colors offer the best examples of the lively expression of language. In Kazakh Turkish, the symboli...
A Reflection of Thai Culture in Thai Plant Names
A Reflection of Thai Culture in Thai Plant Names
The present study focuses on the plant naming system in the Thai language based on 1) Brent Berlin’s general principles of categorization of plants and animals in traditional socie...
Son of Heaven and Son of God: Interactions among Ancient Asiatic Cultures regarding Sacral Kingship and Theophoric Names
Son of Heaven and Son of God: Interactions among Ancient Asiatic Cultures regarding Sacral Kingship and Theophoric Names
AbstractThis article examines the interrelationship and interactions between the notions of Son of Heaven and Son of God with respect to sacral kingship in Inner and East Asia by f...
The subject of painting: works by Barbara Walker and Eugene Palmer
The subject of painting: works by Barbara Walker and Eugene Palmer
This article looks at some examples of recent paintings by black British artists in relation to postmodern notions of the decentred and fragmented self. If the so-called unified se...