• Title of article

    ETHNIC/RACIAL ATTITUDES AND SELF-IDENTIFICATION OF BLACK JAMAICAN AND WHITE NEW ENGLAND CHILDREN

  • Author/Authors

    PHEBE CRAMER GAIL ANDERSON، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
  • Pages
    22
  • From page
    395
  • To page
    416
  • Abstract
    Atotal of 411 children from urban and rural areas of Jamaica and from rural NewEngland were examined by both White and Black interviewers for their skin color and body size preferences and for self-identification, using a modified dolls test. Overall, children from all three communities showed White favoritism and average body size favoritism.Within communities, there were age and gender differences. Kindergartners from rural Jamaica did not show skin color or body size bias, and White fifth/sixth graders from New England showed reverse, pro-Black and pro-chubby favoritism. In Jamaica, boys displayed more bias than girls. Correct racial self-identification was greater among New England than Jamaican children, possibly related to the choice of White as an ideal self among some Jamaican children. Examiner skin color influenced both color and body size preference; self-identification was influenced by examiner skin color only among the rural Jamaican children.
  • Keywords
    skin color and body size preference , U.S. and Jamaican children
  • Journal title
    Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
  • Serial Year
    2003
  • Journal title
    Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
  • Record number

    708134