Can race and ethnicity be represented by the colors found in a crayon box? lilivanili/Flickr hide caption
Code Switch: Word Watch
Fun fact: The vines that vanilla beans grow on also produce orchids. Malcolm Manners via Flickr hide caption
Jay-Z performs during his Magna Carter world tour this past January. Owen Sweeney/AP hide caption
A photograph of the Pearl River in Canton or Guangzhou, China, taken around 1870-1880. UIG via Getty Images hide caption
The Royal Peacock in Atlanta was one of the more famous venues on the Chitlin' Circuit. Libray of Congress hide caption
Immigrants wait in a registration room on Ellis Island in 1912. Underwood & Underwood/Corbis hide caption
Slave auction in New Orleans, 1842, "Sale of Estates, Pictures and Slaves in the Rotunda, New Orleans." The nation's most active slave market was in New Orleans. Slaves who had been "sold down the river" were auctioned off to plantation owners. Encyclopaedia Britannica/UIG via Getty Images hide caption
In this photo from 1993, television producer Aaron Spelling's Los Angeles home is shown. Spelling's widow placed the 56,000 square-foot house on the market for $150 million. MARK TERRILL/AP hide caption
The Carlisle Indian Industrial School became a model for dozens of other boarding schools for Native Americans. The government would eventually make attendance compulsory for Native children. Library of Congress hide caption
The Three Stooges movie Gypped In the Penthouse is one of many pieces of media that uses the pejorative. Columbia Pictures hide caption
A still from the 1943 film I Walked With A Zombie. RKO/The Kobal Collection hide caption
Jazz trumpeter Louis Armstrong signs autographs in the Blue Note nightclub in Chicago in 1948. Edward S. Kitch/AP hide caption
Nine out of 10 workers on the transcontinental railroad were Chinese. These indentured laborers, derogatorily called "coolies," became a prime target for criticism in the mid-19th century. Joseph Becker/Library of Congress hide caption
A photograph of a group of elderly men sitting on a mat, taken in Peshawar, now in Pakistan, circa 1865. Two of the men are looking at each other with contempt, suggesting that they may actually be enemies who have been persuaded to be photographed together as examples of native "thugs." Getty Images hide caption
Anton Refregier's Beating the Chinese is a panel in the History of San Francisco mural at the city's Rincon Center. Chinese immigrants were frequent targets of hoodlums in the late 19th century. Carol M. Highsmith/Library of Congress hide caption