ABSTRACT

The election of Barack Obama as the 44th president of the United States has opened a new chapter in the country’s long and often tortured history of inter-racial and inter-ethnic relations. Many relished in the inauguration of the country’s first African American president — an event foreseen by another White House aspirant, Senator Robert Kennedy, four decades earlier. What could have only been categorized as a dream in the wake of Brown vs. Board of Education was now a reality. Some dared to contemplate a post-racial America. Still, soon after Obama’s election a small but persistent faction questioned his eligibility to hold office; they insisted that Obama was foreign-born. Following the Civil Rights battles of the 20th century hate speech, at least in public, is no longer as free flowing as it had been. Perhaps xenophobia, in a land of immigrants, is the new rhetorical device to assail what which is non-white and hence un-American. Furthermore, recent debates about immigration and racial profiling in Arizona along with the battle over rewriting of history and civics textbooks in Texas suggest that a post-racial America is a long way off.

What roles do race, ethnicity, ancestry, immigration status, locus of birth play in the public and private conversations that defy and reinforce existing conceptions of what it means to be American?

This book exposes the changing and persistent notions of American identity in the age of Obama. Amílcar Antonio Barreto, Richard L. O’Bryant, and an outstanding line up of contributors examine Obama’s election and reelection as watershed phenomena that will be exploited by the president’s supporters and detractors to engage in different forms of narrating the American national saga. Despite the potential for major changes in rhetorical mythmaking, they question whether American society has changed substantively.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

The Age of Obama and American Identity

chapter |28 pages

Racial Identification in a Post-Obama Era

Multiracialism, Identity Choice, and Candidate Evaluation

chapter |30 pages

The Son of a Black Man from Kenya and a White Woman from Kansas

Immigration and Racial Neoliberalism in the Age of Obama

chapter |19 pages

Browning Our Way to Post-Race

Identity, Identification, and Securitization of Brown

chapter |23 pages

White Masculinities in the Age of Obama

Rebuilding or Reloading?

chapter |23 pages

Exceptionally Distinctive

President Obama's Complicated Articulation of American Exceptionalism

chapter |24 pages

Barack Obama's Foreign Policy Leadership

Renewing America's Image

chapter |23 pages

The First Black President?

Cross-Racial Perceptions of Barack Obama's Race