Abstract

This article focuses on the political dimension of U.S. elections and uses anthropological methods to analyze racial politics in New Orleans and Louisiana. Situating the research within the color-blindness ideology in the Post-civil Rights Era, the article discusses the continuity of racial inequality in the United States. By presenting the case of U.S. Congressman Joseph Anh Cao (2009-2011), the article argues that although the color-blindness ideology has been deployed since the 1960s, skin color continues to be a variable for redistricting practice in the United States. The successful U.S. Congress run of Mr. Cao in the 2008 election should not be considered that American society has become non-biased. Instead, his defeat in 2010 is an evidence that the United States has not yet been color-blind. Received 18th August 2021; Revised 12th February 2022; Accepted 26th March 2022

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