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‘Multi-Racial’ Black People Look More Appealing, Even When They’re Not Actually Multi-Racial

Just the suggestion that an African-American person is of mixed-race heritage makes that person more attractive to others, research from Duke University concludes.

This holds true even if the people in question arenโ€™t actually of multiracial heritage, according to the peer-reviewed study, published in the June 2016 issue of Review of Black Political Economy.

The simple perception of exoticism sways people to see multiracial blacks as better-looking, says study author Robert L. Reece, a doctoral candidate in sociology at Duke.

โ€œBeing exotic is a compelling idea,โ€ Reece says. โ€œSo people are attracted to a certain type of difference. Itโ€™s also partially just racism โ€“ the notion that black people are less attractive, so being partially not-black makes you more attractive.โ€

Reece used data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. He examined the results of in-person interviews of 3,200 black people conducted by people of varying races. The interviewees were asked a series of questions that included their racial backgrounds. The questioners then ranked each personโ€™s attractiveness on a scale of 1 to 5, with 1 being the least attractive and 5 being the most attractive. The interviewees who identified as mixed race were given an average attractiveness rating of 3.74; those who identified as black were given a 3.47 score โ€“ a statistically significant difference that points to the power of perception, Reece says. (The study controlled for a number of factors such as gender, age, skin tone, hair color and eye color)

โ€œRace is more than we think it is,โ€ he says. โ€œItโ€™s more than physical characteristics and ancestry and social class. The idea that youโ€™re a certain race shapes how people view you.โ€

And attractiveness matters. Previous research has drawn correlations between physical beauty and professional success.

Reeceโ€™s findings bolster a viewpoint that lighter-skinned blacks are considered more physically striking than their darker-skinned counterparts. But his research also found that blacks with darker skin who identified as mixed-race were considered better looking than those with lighter skin who identified simply as black. This further emphasizes the power of suggestion, Reece says; being told a person is of mixed race โ€“ regardless of what that person looks like โ€“ makes them appear more attractive.

โ€œItโ€™s a loaded cognitive suggestion when you say โ€˜Iโ€™m not just black, Iโ€™m also Native American, for example,โ€ Reece says. โ€œIt changes the entire dynamic.โ€

Reece tackled this topic to examine the connection between multiraciality and โ€œcolor,โ€ he says.

โ€œPeople tend to assume that historical multiraciality is at least partially responsible for the broad range of color among black people,โ€ he says. โ€œIโ€™ve even noticed some people in black communities casually using the terms โ€œmixedโ€ and โ€œlight skinnedโ€ interchangeably. So I wanted to begin an empirical investigation into the contemporary links between the two and how they combine to shape peopleโ€™s life experiences. Attractiveness is one part of that.โ€

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