• Jessica Colarossi

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    Jessica Colarossi is a science writer for The Brink. She graduated with a BS in journalism from Emerson College in 2016, with focuses on environmental studies and publishing. While a student, she interned at ThinkProgress in Washington, D.C., where she wrote over 30 stories, most of them relating to climate change, coral reefs, and women’s health. Profile

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There are 4 comments on 如果婴幼儿能察觉种族,为什么许多澳门威尼斯人注册网站回避谈论种族?

  1. It’s not race they’re “detecting”, it’s physical differences compared to their primary caregivers.

    They depend on adults for everything, are exceptionally vulnerable, and have to effectively determine who is a safe adult. Correlates of “safe” are: who provides safety, nourishment, enjoyment, etc. and what does that person look like.

    They attach/bond to their primary caregivers and associate what that person looks like with those safety correlates.

    What does the research in blended, multiracial families with children of the same age tell us? That children are more likely to express those multiracial bond attachments as a broader function of who is trustworthy based on physical appearance.

    Some children are startled or fascinated by physical and superficial differences in people not family. Crooked teeth, an amputee, a person who is nongender conforming, skin a different color, hair a different color/texture, different facial features.

    As a 6 year old I recall being fascinated by
    a stranger’s cheek and jawline and couldn’t stop staring. It reminded me of a horse.

    Kids don’t detect “race” because race does not compute as something socially real or relevant for them until they are taught how to process (attach value to) the physical differences they see.

    And if their caregivers teach them through verbal and nonverbal cues that those physical differences are considered in some way deficient or inferior, then kids internalize the foundations for negative racial bias.

    Treat physical differences as neutral/normal and kids are less likely to develop those valuations and biases about them,

    Unfortunately kids dont just learn from caregivers, they are constantly immersed in a social milieu barraged by conflicting messages. If the culture they’re in is a fundamentally dishonest, hypocritical, violent, or socially delayed one (as most racist, sexist, colonialist, capitalist societies are) they are taught to go against their natural curiosity and degrade their own emerging humanity in order to keep their peer group, caregivers, or other influentials happy.

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