▲ | philipallstar 2 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
> In some widespread contexts "american" is racially defaulted to white. Full stop. Can you say what these widespread contexts are? Question mark. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | Atlas667 a day ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
When you need to specify what kind of lineage a person carries people will commonly say a person is "african-american" or "native-american", but never say "european-american". As another comment pointed out this is in part due to racial majority being defaulted into the non-specific term "american". As in: most americans are white so "americans" is thought of as refering to the biggest group of americans. And in part due to historical subjugation of those other "americans". As in: less than 80 years ago the term "americans" was used almost exclusively to refer to white americans due to systemic racism. This context is still particularly prevalent in media headlines. | |||||||||||||||||
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