Drawing on 15 years of research in Bahia, Rio de Janeiro, Suriname, and
the Netherlands, Sansone explores the very different ways that race and
ethnicity are constructed in Brazil and the rest of Latin America. He
compares Latin American conceptions of race to US and European notions
of race that are defined by clearly identifiable black-white
ethnicities. Sansone argues that understanding more complex, ambiguous
notions of culture and identity will expand international discourse on
race and move it away from American definitions that inadequately
describe racial difference. He also explores the effects of
globalization on constructions of race.