3092
Miscegenation
The world has changed. Blended families are increasingly appearing in each country. And very soon, we will not know which genes in us. Important or not, but reflect current trends as they only formed, extremely interesting.
The singer under the name CYJO presented a unique project, not just showing a family where family members belong to different races, but also tell about their ancestors and some of the features.
Family Snodgrass, 2013 moved to China in 1999, then returned to America. The ancestors of the Germans, the Chinese, the Irish. Nationality: China, America. Languages: English, Chinese.
Family Walter, 2010. Nationality: American, German. Ancestors: African Americans, American Indians, inhabitants of the Bahamas, French, Germans. Languages: English, German, French, Spanish. Living in New York City.
Family Doyle, 2010 Nationality: American. Ancestors: Africans, American Indians, Creoles, Cubans, French, Irish. Languages: English, Spanish, French. Living in New York City.
Family Juan Rierson, 2011. Citizenship: USA, Belgium. Ancestors: the Chinese, the Europeans, with the exception of France. Languages: Chinese, French, English. Living in Beijing.
Family Chandola, 2013. Citizenship: India, Korea. Ancestors, Indians, Koreans. Languages: English, Korean, Chinese, Hindi. Living in Beijing.
The artist and photographer, who consider themselves Europeans Korean descent, said that one of the reasons the project was the creation of the history of China, where the population is rapidly acquires a completely different features of appearance and behavior. This is an old China that actively replaced by the new.
The most important issue is the question of the preservation of national identity. What will become of the culture of the country, when erased faces? What will define the rules of language, food traditions, norms of behavior? Leave whether differences between people, if assimilating all the nations of the world?
Family Kishimoto, 2013. Citizenship: China, Japan. Ancestors: Chinese, Japanese, ksibo (ethnic northern Chinese). Languages: Chinese, Japanese, English. Living in Beijing.
Family KasaRosa, 2010. Citizenship: USA, Italy, Korea. Ancestors: Italians, Koreans. Languages: English, Italian, Korean. Living in New York City.
Ability to collate and compare life styles allows you to get an idea of merging cultures. This experience becomes a symbol of uniting people around the world. All photos were taken between 2010 and 2013.
Family of James, 2010. Nationality: American. Ancestors: American Indian, Chinese, Dutch, English, Filipino, German, Irish, Japanese, Prussia. Languages: English, French, Pidgin English. Living in New York City.
The singer under the name CYJO presented a unique project, not just showing a family where family members belong to different races, but also tell about their ancestors and some of the features.
Family Snodgrass, 2013 moved to China in 1999, then returned to America. The ancestors of the Germans, the Chinese, the Irish. Nationality: China, America. Languages: English, Chinese.
Family Walter, 2010. Nationality: American, German. Ancestors: African Americans, American Indians, inhabitants of the Bahamas, French, Germans. Languages: English, German, French, Spanish. Living in New York City.
Family Doyle, 2010 Nationality: American. Ancestors: Africans, American Indians, Creoles, Cubans, French, Irish. Languages: English, Spanish, French. Living in New York City.
Family Juan Rierson, 2011. Citizenship: USA, Belgium. Ancestors: the Chinese, the Europeans, with the exception of France. Languages: Chinese, French, English. Living in Beijing.
Family Chandola, 2013. Citizenship: India, Korea. Ancestors, Indians, Koreans. Languages: English, Korean, Chinese, Hindi. Living in Beijing.
The artist and photographer, who consider themselves Europeans Korean descent, said that one of the reasons the project was the creation of the history of China, where the population is rapidly acquires a completely different features of appearance and behavior. This is an old China that actively replaced by the new.
The most important issue is the question of the preservation of national identity. What will become of the culture of the country, when erased faces? What will define the rules of language, food traditions, norms of behavior? Leave whether differences between people, if assimilating all the nations of the world?
Family Kishimoto, 2013. Citizenship: China, Japan. Ancestors: Chinese, Japanese, ksibo (ethnic northern Chinese). Languages: Chinese, Japanese, English. Living in Beijing.
Family KasaRosa, 2010. Citizenship: USA, Italy, Korea. Ancestors: Italians, Koreans. Languages: English, Italian, Korean. Living in New York City.
Ability to collate and compare life styles allows you to get an idea of merging cultures. This experience becomes a symbol of uniting people around the world. All photos were taken between 2010 and 2013.
Family of James, 2010. Nationality: American. Ancestors: American Indian, Chinese, Dutch, English, Filipino, German, Irish, Japanese, Prussia. Languages: English, French, Pidgin English. Living in New York City.