megu's masala mind
Do you ever feel like we have an unique racialized experience in the U.S.? In this episode, I break down the formal racialization of South Asians in the United States: how laws, institutions, and official categories have tried to place us into fixed racial boxes. Using the DesiCrit framework, I trace how South Asians have been racially ambiguous from the beginning: sometimes treated as proximate to whiteness, sometimes pushed into non-white status, and often forced to navigate shifting classifications that don’t match lived reality. I focus on what formal categories do (and don’t) capture, and why South Asian “in-betweenness” is not a recent identity crisis, but a long-running feature of how race has been administered in the U.S. Harpalani, V. (2013). DesiCrit: Theorizing the racial ambiguity of South Asian Americans. New York University Annual Survey of American Law, 69(1), 77–184.
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