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About the ExhibitHumans vary. Our skin tones range from milk-white to dark brown, our hair textures from blond and fine to dark thick and curly and our eye colors from green to black. Physical characteristics such as these - along with geographical and culture differences – are often used to group people into “races.” “Races” can be a source of strength, community, and identity; but they have also been the basis for discrimination, bias, and oppression. Most people believe race is biological when it is in fact social and cultural. Can you accurately define a person’s background or genetic makeup simply by looking at an outward physical feature? RACE: Are We So Different?, an interactive, engaging travelling exhibition tackles these topics and helps visitors understand what race is and what it is not. Curated by the American Anthropological Association and the Science Museum of Minnesota, RACE provides both the tools to recognize racial ideas and practices in contemporary American life, and an opportunity to dialogue around one of America’s most sensitive topics - race. Looking through the eyes of history, science and lived experience, the RACE project challenges us to rethink our understanding of race.
An Interactive Website and Exhibit Did you know over one million visitors have seen the RACE website and exhibit? Discover the project everyone is talking about. RACE will be on exhibit in Kalamazoo at the Kalamazoo Valley Museum from October 2010 to January 2011. To visit the RACE website, go to www.understandingRACE.org. The exhibit will be free and open to the public! Locally, a community leadership board is organizing the events surrounding the exhibit. Learn more about auxiliary programming. RACE: Are we so Different?
-Nelson Mandela
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