Colorism And Skin-Color Stratification Chapter 6 Test Bank - Test Bank | Race & Racisms 3e Golash Boza by Tanya Maria Golash Boza. DOCX document preview.
Chapter 6: Colorism and Skin-Color Stratification
Test Bank
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 01
1) When a society in which Blacks, Asians, and Latinos have different social statuses according to their skin color, it is called:
a. Color hierarchy
b. Preferential pigmentation
c. Colorocracy
d. Pigmentocracy
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 02
2) According to Joni Hersch (2008) what is the pay disparity between the lightest-skinned immigrants and the darkest-skinned immigrants, even accounting for gender, education, English-language skills, visa type, and occupation?
a. 17%
b. 23%
c. 36%
d. 41%
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 03
3) Most of the enslaved Africans who first arrived where dark-skinned. Soon after, there became a mixture of Black and White people called:
a. mixed-race.
b. blended.
c. mulattos.
d. mestizo.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 04
4) The idea that having any amount of Black ancestry makes you Black is called:
a. hypodescent.
b. one-drop rule.
c. anti-Blackness.
d. Black from birth.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 05
5) In Brazil, the census classifies people as:
a. blacha, café, moreno, and mestizo.
b. White, pardo, Black, and mulatto.
c. White, café con leche, negro, and mesitzaje.
d. none of the above.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 06
6) In Indian and Indonesian texts, beautiful women are described as having:
a. skin as pure as milk.
b. skin as white as pearls.
c. White faces like the full moon.
d. White faces like a white diamond.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 07
7) Anthropologist Peter Frost (2006) after reviewing evidence found some evidence that a preference for lighter skin:
a. came from colonists.
b. predates colonialism.
c. began in the 5th century.
d. was different among various tribes.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 08
8) In Latin America, the Spaniards came up with a legal ranking in society based on skin color, which of the following was NOT among the categories?
a. castizos
b. indios
c. mestizo
d. negros
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 09
9) Skin-whitening products are prevalent in Asia, Latin America, Africa, and the United States. This is evidence of:
a. world-wide colorism.
b. stratified skin preferences.
c. global color hierarchy.
d. global racism.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 10
10) The dispersion of people from their original homeland is called the:
a. displacement.
b. dispersal.
c. dispersion.
d. diaspora.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 11
11) Neha Dixit shares her story about being dark complexioned in India in the 1990s. What did an old woman who walked up to her say she had to do to have a fair-skinned child?
a. Eat lots of white rice at every meal.
b. Bathe in goat’s milk once a week.
c. Drink a ½ cup of fresh, non-boiled cow milk every morning.
d. Put flour, milk, and turmeric on her face daily.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 12
12) In Latin America, who is typically at the bottom of the skin hierarchy?
a. Black and Indigenous people
b. Black people
c. Indigenous people
d. Mestizos
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 13
13) Researchers have studied colorism among Latinos in America, which of the following is NOT a finding?
a. Darker-skinned Puerto Ricans experience lower job quality.
b. Darker-skinned Latinos are more likely to be stopped and arrested.
c. Lighter-skinned Latinos are seen as beautiful, but uneducated.
d. Lighter-skinned Latinos earn more money.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 14
14) Many African countries are marked by a hierarchy of skin tone, which of the following is true:
a. Lighter-skinned people are paid by the government to be models.
b. Mixed-race people occupy more positions of power.
c. Darker-skinned people are provided skin-bleaching products for free.
d. Darker-skinned people are preferred in positions of leadership.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 15
15) The _________social movement helped alleviate colorism among Black Americans.
a. I’m Black and I’m proud
b. Black is back
c. The darker the berry, the sweeter the juice
d. Black is beautiful
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 16
16) What do some researchers use to measure skin tone?
a. The American Medical Association Skin Tone Test
b. The International Survey of Skin Tone Stratification
c. The National Immigrant Survey Skin Color Scale
d. Kodak’s Shirley Card Skin Tone Calibration Tool
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 17
17) Darker-skinned African Americans are more likely to:
a. get longer prison sentences.
b. receive the death penalty.
c. have a less prestigious occupation.
d. All of the above.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 18
18) To explain how sexism and racism interact to create a scale of women from lightest to darkest, where the lightest get the most resources and the darkest get the least, Margaret Hunter (2005) created the concept of:
a. a beauty quotient.
b. a beauty queue.
c. a color chain of beauty.
d. the skin color sequencing.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 19
19) Siobhan Brooks (2010) uses the concept of _____ ________ to explain how skin color relates to beauty for women of color?
a. skin sexiness
b. sexy stock
c. exotic capital
d. erotic capital
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 20
20) The MuslimARC launched a hashtag that trended in London about skin tone and beauty. What was it called?
a. #BritsAreBeautiful
b. #FairandLovingIt
c. #NotFairandLovely
d. #LightIsRight
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 01
1) What is the difference between racism and colorism?
Page reference: Introduction
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 02
2) Scholars who believe that colorism stems from the history of slavery and genocide in the Americas, fundamentally believe that preference for light skin is:
Page reference: The History of Colorism
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 03
3) In examining Latino immigrants to the U.S., researchers found that darker-skinned Latinos earn, on average, $2,500 less per year than lighter-skinned Latinos. What was their argument as to why?
Page reference: The Origins of Colorism in the Americas
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 04
4) After the arrival of Africans in the U.S., states classified someone is Black based on different laws. What were some of the differences?
Page reference: The Origins of Colorism in the Americas
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 05
5) In India, in what way is the preference for light skin also connected to the caste system?
Page reference: Asians and Asian Americans
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 06
6) What do people in Latin America often strategically choose romantic partners who are lighter in skin tone than themselves?
Page reference: Latin America and Latino/as
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 07
7) In Tanzania, a team of scholars interviewed 42 women to ask them why they used skin-bleaching products even though they could cause severe skin damage, skin cancer, and brain disease. They gave six reasons, what were two of them?
Page reference: Africa and the African Diaspora
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 08
8) What does studying skin tone matter in school suspension?
Page reference: Skin Tone and School Suspension
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 09
9) What does Grey’s Anatomy star Jesse Williams, who plays Dr. Harper Avery, say about the benefits of being light-skinned and having European features?
Page reference: Skin Color, Gender, and Beauty
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 10
10) What did researchers find in a study of the Queen Nigeria pageant and the Most Beautiful Girl in Nigeria pageant?
Page reference: Skin Color, Gender, and Beauty
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 01
1) In the opening story, bell hooks described young rituals for so many young, Black girls. What does she mean by “good hair” and what does she know now that she didn’t know then?
Page reference: Introduction
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 02
2) How did colorism play out during the era of slavery?
Page reference: Origins of Colorism in the Americas
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 03
3) By the end of the colonial period in Latin America, how many possible categories were memorialized in a series of casta paintings? Please name and describe at least two (2).
Page reference: Origins of Colorism in the Americas
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 04
4) What did the actress, in a 2016 commercial from Thailand for skin-whitening pills called Snowz, say was the secret to her success?
Page reference: The Global Color Hierarchy
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 06 Question 05
5) What did Kaitlyn Greenidge share about “the toxic legacy of colorism?”
Page reference: Voices: Skin Color, Gender, and Beauty
Document Information
Connected Book
Test Bank | Race & Racisms 3e Golash Boza
By Tanya Maria Golash Boza
Explore recommendations drawn directly from what you're reading
Chapter 4 Sociological Theories Of Race And Racism
DOCX Ch. 4
Chapter 5 Racism In The Media The Spread Of Ideology
DOCX Ch. 5
Chapter 6 Colorism And Skin-Color Stratification
DOCX Ch. 6 Current
Chapter 7 White Privilege And The Changing U.S. Racial Hierarchy
DOCX Ch. 7
Chapter 8 Educational Inequality
DOCX Ch. 8