2019
DOI: 10.1353/csd.2019.0066
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"Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria?": And Other Conversations About Race by Beverly Daniel Tatum

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Cited by 75 publications
(124 citation statements)
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“…(e.g., the institution of slavery against enslaved Africans, detention of Japanese people in concentration camps, and native language loss among people whose first language was not English) informs which racial/ethnic groups have collective power to perpetuate and receive racism. Focusing solely on individual-level racism absolves White people from taking ownership of their role in the development and perpetuation of systemic racism (Tatum, 2017). Thematic analysis also revealed that colorevasive ideology was expressed when youth described racism as an intrapersonal/interpersonal phenomenon, suggesting that egalitarian beliefs that stress the importance of human equality may also coincide with beliefs that diminish power differentials between White people and people of color (Neville et al, 2013).…”
Section: Racism As An Intrapersonal/interpersonal Phenomenonmentioning
confidence: 97%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…(e.g., the institution of slavery against enslaved Africans, detention of Japanese people in concentration camps, and native language loss among people whose first language was not English) informs which racial/ethnic groups have collective power to perpetuate and receive racism. Focusing solely on individual-level racism absolves White people from taking ownership of their role in the development and perpetuation of systemic racism (Tatum, 2017). Thematic analysis also revealed that colorevasive ideology was expressed when youth described racism as an intrapersonal/interpersonal phenomenon, suggesting that egalitarian beliefs that stress the importance of human equality may also coincide with beliefs that diminish power differentials between White people and people of color (Neville et al, 2013).…”
Section: Racism As An Intrapersonal/interpersonal Phenomenonmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Youth possess sociocognitive skills (e.g., perspective taking and abstract thinking) that allow them to identify and analyze institutional racism, or the ways in which culture, laws, and policies privilege White people and disadvantage people of color in institutions, such as schools (Tatum, 2017). Thus, youths' ability to identify institutional racism is a developmental skill that is likely to increase across adolescence (Bañales et al, 2020;Brown & Bigler, 2005;Seider et al, 2021).…”
Section: Racial Consciousness During Adolescencementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Specifically, race or racism was not explicitly defined in the study, and inequality is described only with respect to the constructs used for analysis (a race difference score); that is, the disparity between Black and White students was operationalized without naming the sociohistorical structure of race (or racism) in which schools and adolescents are nested. Leaving this key construct un(der)specified misses a critical opportunity to name racism as a system of advantage and disadvantage, 9 which is necessary for interpreting racial differences and disparities. 1,10 Without such intentionality, racial disparity in school belonging can incorrectly become a stand-in for racism.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%