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Race and Nation in Latin America: Whitening, Browning, and the Failures of Mestizaje

Dig: A History Podcast

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Blackness - A History of Blackness in Late Latin America

During Latin America's colonial history, whitening was regarded as the quote-unquote goal. A vibrant print culture emerged wherein naturalists argued how many crossings were required to clear black or brown blood. Jean Baptiste Lebau argued that whites could be bred from indios, or Indians, in merely three crossing. These anxieties are depicted in famous Mexican casa's paintings. In these paintings, which earlier experts believed would achieve whitening, at least in the case of the indio, did no such thing for descendants of blacks.

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