“Mixed Heritage in the Family takes mixed-race studies to the next generation. Carolyn Liebler and Miri Song break new ground by pushing multiraciality beyond the individual and considering how it influences individuals’ choice of spouse, their child-rearing, and the transmission of racial identity to their children. In its mixed methods, its multiple group comparisons, and its careful analysis of place and context, this book is a major advance for the field.”
—WENDY D. ROTH, professor of sociology, University of Pennsylvania
“Through the skillfully blended analysis of census data and in-depth interviews, Carolyn Liebler and Miri Song expand our understanding of mixed-heritage racial self-reporting, especially as it is entwined with the racial identification of spouses and children. Equally importantly, they also advance our knowledge of how local social contexts shape racial identity options.”
—ANN MORNING, James Weldon Johnson Professor of Sociology and divisional dean for the social sciences, New York University
“Mixed Heritage in the Family is a signature achievement. Using interview accounts and decades of national data, this book provides the most comprehensive assessment of mixed-race adults to date. Carolyn Liebler and Miri Song offer a window into the many ways identification, relationship formation, and child-rearing all factor into how mixing can alter the lines between groups. Additionally, these authors reveal how critical it is to consider the role of geography. Liebler and Song provide a sophisticated and accessible narrative to reshape how sociologists understand the role of racial mixture in drawing and redrawing boundaries around racial groups.”
—JENIFER BRATTER, professor of sociology and associate chair, Rice University