megu's masala mind

neither/nor: the formal racialization of south asians in the u.s.

49 min · 10 de feb de 2026
portada del episodio neither/nor: the formal racialization of south asians in the u.s.

Descripción

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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After a month-long pause, I’m coming back to this space: not to start over, but to re-center. In this episode, I revisit why I started this podcast and what it’s becoming. What began as a messy, thinking-out-loud space is shifting into something more intentional: a place where lived experience, theory, and cultural observation come together to make meaning. Using ideas from DesiCrit, I reflect on displacement, invisibility, and the pressures that shape South Asian students in higher education. This is less about having answers and more about naming patterns, sitting with tension, and asking better questions about what we inherit—and what we choose to keep, revise, or unlearn. Haque, Z. (2025). Extending DesiCrit: How critical race theory helps to unpack the South Asian American educational experience. Race Ethnicity and Education. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1080/13613324.2025.2488748 [https://doi.org/10.1080/13613324.2025.2488748]

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episode neither/nor: the formal racialization of south asians in the u.s. artwork

neither/nor: the formal racialization of south asians in the u.s.

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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