Journal article
Social Psychology and Personality Science, 2021
APA
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Lopez, J. J., Eason, A. E., & Fryberg, S. A. (2021). The Same, Yet Different: Understanding the Perceived Acceptability of Redface and Blackface. Social Psychology and Personality Science.
Chicago/Turabian
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Lopez, Julisa J., Arianne E. Eason, and Stephanie A. Fryberg. “The Same, Yet Different: Understanding the Perceived Acceptability of Redface and Blackface.” Social Psychology and Personality Science (2021).
MLA
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Lopez, Julisa J., et al. “The Same, Yet Different: Understanding the Perceived Acceptability of Redface and Blackface.” Social Psychology and Personality Science, 2021.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{julisa2021a,
title = {The Same, Yet Different: Understanding the Perceived Acceptability of Redface and Blackface},
year = {2021},
journal = {Social Psychology and Personality Science},
author = {Lopez, Julisa J. and Eason, Arianne E. and Fryberg, Stephanie A.}
}
In recent years, several high-profile individuals were sanctioned (e.g., fired) when photos of them dressed in blackface surfaced. Yet, every weekend during sports seasons, fans dress in redface to support teams with Native mascots. Given the observed discrepancy, five studies examined whether and why the perceived acceptability of these two racialized representations differs. Across varying methods and designs, we found that redface was perceived as more acceptable than blackface. The differential acceptability was explained by the extent to which people believe that Native (vs. Black) Peoples: 1) largely do not exist within contemporary social contexts (i.e., social erasure) and 2) experience less racism. The results suggest that eliminating racialized representations requires understanding the role that sociocultural factors play in sustaining discrimination and prejudice.