Social Theory and Practice

Volume 21, Issue 3, Fall 1995

Anna Stubblefield
Pages 341-368

Racial Identity and Non-Essentialism About Race

Cited by

  • Ron Mallon. Journal of Political Philosophy. Human Categories Beyond Non‐essentialism* 2007. [CrossRef]
  • Charles T. Adeyanju, Temitope B. Oriola. Journal of Black Studies. Colonialism and Contemporary African Migration: A Phenomenological Approach 2011. [CrossRef]
  • Molly Littlewood McKibbin. Rethinking Rachel Doležal and Transracial Theory 2021: 53. [CrossRef]
  • Erin N. Winkler. Children and Youth Speak for Themselves 2010: 423. [CrossRef]
  • Kurt Borchard. Cultural Studies ↔ Critical Methodologies. An Experiment in Second Person Writing: Notes on a Partial Jewish Identity 2018. [CrossRef]
  • Nigel I. Malcolm. Journal of African American Studies. Slaves to the Community: Blacks and the Rhetoric of “Selling Out” 2015. [CrossRef]
  • Arthur Gwagwa, Emre Kazim, Airlie Hilliard. Patterns. The role of the African value of Ubuntu in global AI inclusion discourse: A normative ethics perspective 2022. [CrossRef]
  • by Tommie Shelby. Ethics. Foundations of Black Solidarity: Collective Identity or Common Oppression? 2002. [CrossRef]
  • Krista M. Malott. Journal of Counseling & Development. Investigation of Ethnic Self‐Labeling in the Latina Population: Implications for Counselors and Counselor Educators 2009. [CrossRef]
  • Amy N. Heuman, Alberto González. Journal of Intercultural Communication Research. Trump’s Essentialist Border Rhetoric: Racial Identities and Dangerous Liminalities 2018. [CrossRef]
  • Aeriel A. Ashlee, Stephen John Quaye. International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education. On being racially enough: a duoethnography across minoritized racial identities 2021. [CrossRef]
There may be additional citations on Google Scholar.