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This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. Without cookies your experience may not be seamless. The extensive mixing of races in Brazil has fascinated scholars who have often traced parallels with the United States. Historically speaking, in the United States racism was founded on biology one-drop rule , while in Brazil stigmatization and discrimination were based on phenotype, that is, there was a veiled preference for Caucasian physical characteristics Nogueira — This information was confirmed in a study conducted by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics IBGE to respond to the needs of the people who complained that the five racial categories white, black, brown, Indian, and Asian that had been previously used to classify the population were insufficient to describe the variety of existent skin colors.
Howard Winant presents a revisionist reading of race categorization in Brazil and the United States. Even though biracialism was the verifiable measure to define race classifications in the United States, in reality not all people were distinguished or treated just in terms of that bipolarity.
It is a fact that light-skinned African Americans historically received a more preferential treatment than those who were darker. A number of scholars have examined the slippery nature of race categories in Brazil by discussing, for instance, how the word mulata a parda woman is oftentimes interwoven with the term morena technically a brunette, olive-skinned woman.
The white elite and the governing authorities hoped that through miscegenation, by the third generation, the children of interracial marriages would have lost most of the physical characteristics that could categorize them as direct descendants of African slaves. An illustration of such theory hung on the walls of the National Museum of Rio de Janeiro. By the end of the nineteenth century, the large Afro-Brazilian population of both sexes had already successfully tiptoed its way past many racial and social crossroads.