P. Mohammed, 'But most of all mi love me browning': The emergence in eighteenth and nineteenth-century Jamaica of the mulatto woman as the desired, FEM REV, (65), 2000, pp. 22-48
One of the most common threads in the Caribbean tapestry races which have p
opulated the region over the last five centuries largely through forced or
voluntary migration, is that there have emerged mixtures of the different r
acial groups. A large proportion of Caribbean women and men are referred to
euphemistically as 'mixed race'. The terms used to describe people of mixe
d race vary by territory and have been incrementally added to or changed ov
er time. The original nomenclatures such as sambo, musteephino, mulatto, cr
eole, etc. have been replaced at present to include terms like brown skin,
mulatto, clear skin, light skin, red-nigger, dougla and browning. The title
of the article comes from a contemporary dance-hall song in Jamaica in whi
ch the black singer, Buju Banton, unwittingly echoes an unspoken yet shared
notion of female desirability in the Caribbean: a preference for 'brown' a
s opposed to black women or unmixed women. In the ongoing constructions of
femininity in the region, class and skin colour have intersected with race
to produce hierarchies and stereotypes of femininity based on racial mixing
. Drawing on some of the historical data available, particularly that of th
e pioneering research in this area produced by Lucille Mathurin in 1974, th
is article interrogates some aspects of miscegenation in the Jamaican past,
to configure these with gender, race and class relations in the present. T
he article does not attempt to arrive at conclusive findings but to contrib
ute to the ongoing process in the region, and elsewhere, of differentiating
the category 'woman' in historiography and sociology.