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Definitions of Race and Racism

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Title: Definitions of Race and Racism


1
Definitions of Race and Racism
  • The Center for the Study of White American
    Culture
  • http//euroamerican.org/images/logot.gif

2
Definitions of Race
  • Race n MF, generation, fr. OIt razza (1580)
  • 1 a breeding stock of animals
  • 2 a a family, tribe, people, or nation belonging
    to the same stock b a class or kind of people
    unified by community of interests, habits, or
    characteristics
  • 3 a an actually or potentially interbreeding
    group within a species also a taxonomic
    category (as a subspecies) representing such a
    group b BREED c a division of mankind
    possessing traits that are transmissible by
    descent and sufficient to characterize it as a
    distinct human type
  • 4 obs inherited temperament or disposition 5
    distinctive flavor, taste, or strength
  • Webster's Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary

3
Definitions of Race
  • Race, technically, refers to differential
    concentrations of gene frequencies responsible
    for traits which, so far as we know, are confined
    to physical manifestations such as skin color or
    hair form it has no intrinsic connection with
    cultural patterns and institutions.
  • Milton M. Gordon
  • Assimilation in American Life

4
Definitions of Race
  • Race is a group that is socially defined but on
    the basis of physical criteria.
  • Pierre L. van den Berghe
  • Race and Racism A Comparative Perspective

5
Definitions of Race
  • Race - A specious classification of human beings
    created by Europeans (whites) which assigns human
    worth and social status using "white" as the
    model of humanity and the height of human
    achievement for the purpose of establishing and
    maintaining privilege and power.
  • Ronald Chisom and Michael Washington
  • Undoing Racism A Philosophy of International
    Social Change

6
Definitions of Race
  • Race is a word used in English to refer to
    groups of people until the 1600s, and the meaning
    was broadly applied. The meaning of race slowly
    narrowed until in the late 1700s it took on its
    present meaning to indicate groups of people
    sharing common physical characteristics,
    especially skill color.
  • The narrowing of meaning took place at the same
    time as Europeans were beginning to colorize and
    dominate Africa, Asia, and the Americansareas
    whose native inhabitants differed in skin color
    from Europeans.
  • Over time, racial categories based on skin color
    became a means of differentiating superior
    Europeans from inferior others.
  • Audrey Smedley, Anthropologist (1999)
  • Race in North America

7
Definitions of Race
  • Race - Identifying markers rationalizing a
    subdivision of a species. Some Anthropologists
    classify races in these five categories
  • African/Black,
  • Oceanic/Brown,
  • American/Red,
  • Asiatic/Yellow,
  • European/White.
  • Other anthropologists use these terms
  • Ethiopian/Black,
  • Malayan/Brown,
  • American/Red,
  • Mongolian/Yellow
  • Caucasian/White.
  • Phavia Kujichagulia

8
Definitions of Race
  • Webster's dictionary defines race as any of the
    three divisions of mankind distinguished by skin
    color or a class of individuals from a common
    stock. Although an argument could be made for
    four or five divisions of mankind, Webster only
    recognizes three.
  • Others claim there are as many as 36 races.
  • Others claim there is only one race - the human
    race. The concept of race was established by
    Eurocentric cultures/peoples so that they could
    dehumanize, disenfranchise and/or destroy
    non-White peoples.
  • Phavia Kujichagulia
  • Recognizing and Resolving Racism A Resource and
    Guide for Humane Beings

9
  • Race - A category of the human species sharing
    more or less distinctive physical traits
    transmitted in descent a concept that has little
    scientific validity but continues to have a
    meaning in particular social contexts.
  • Enid Lee, Deborah Menkart and Margo Okazawa-Rey
    (eds.)
  • Beyond Heroes and Holidays A Practical Guide to
    K-12 Anti-Racist, Multicultural Education and
    Staff Development

10
Race
  • is NOT based on biology CREATED category with
    historical roots used to classify groups of
    people.
  • historically was not determined by skin color
    but by class inequalities (e.I., the English
    defined the Irish as a "lower" race.)
  • during colonial expansion by European nations,
    race was defined in terms of skin color where
    non-white people were considered "lower" races.
  • Anti-Racism Media Education (ARMEd)http//opirg.sa
    .utoronto.ca/armed/resources/definitions.html,
    December 20, 2002
  • Today, relationships between differently raced
    people are still determined by this moment in
    history and remain unequal, where white people
    have the most power and privilege and are
    considered the norm (ie. non-raced.)
  • is important to understand that white is also a
    created racial category.
  • is also important to understand that though
    racial categories derived from oppressive
    contexts, they can also be reclaimed and used as
    forms of resistance by communities of color.

11
Definitions of Racism
  • racism n (1936)
  • 1 a belief that race is the primary determinant
    of human traits and capacities and that racial
    differences produce an inherent superiority of a
    particular race
  • 2 racial prejudice or discrimination
  • Webster's Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary

12
Definitions of Racism
  • Racism is race prejudice power
  • Origin unknown (ca. 1970)
  • Used by several groups doing antiracism education
    and training

13
Definitions of Racism
  • On finding that many white Americans were not
    "prejudiced," and did not harbor hostility or
    faulty generalizations about other racial groups,
    but nonetheless resisted change in the nation's
    racial structure, one sociologist finds
  • that racism extends considerably beyond
    prejudiced beliefs. The essential feature of
    racism is not hostility or misperception, but
    rather the defense of a system from which
    advantage is derived on the basis of race. The
    manner in which the defense is articulated -
    either with hostility or subtlety - is not nearly
    as important as the fact that it insures the
    continuation of a privileged relationship. Thus
    it is necessary to broaden the definition of
    racism beyond prejudice to include sentiments
    that in their consequence, if not in their
    intent, support the racial status
  • Quo David T. Wellman Portraits of White Racism,
    Second Edition

14
Definitions of Racism
  • Racism is a global system of material and
    symbolic resource distribution management more
    comprehensively defined, in accordance with each
    of the following principles

15
Definitions of Racism
  • Principle I.
  • Racism is an ideological, structural and
    historic stratification process by which the
    population of European descent, through its
    individual and institutional distress patterns,
    intentionally has been able to sustain, to its
    own best advantage, the dynamic mechanics of
    upward or downward mobility (of fluid status
    assignment) to the general disadvantage of the
    population designated as non-white (on a global
    scale), using skin color, gender, class,
    ethnicity or nonwestern nationality as the main
    indexical criteria used for enforcing
    differential resource allocation decisions that
    contribute to decisive changes in relative racial
    standing in ways most favoring the populations
    designated as 'white.'

16
Definitions of Racism
  • Principle II.
  • The aim of this peculiar post-1492 stratification
    process has been to aggregate an upwardly mobile
    and putatively 'white' racial group that is
    stratified internally and that strives to
    validate its own ascendancy using a shifting
    range of 'white' cultural practices which are
    defined as 'white' not on any presumed biological
    basis, but on the basis of "ideological
    whiteness"--a field of racial discourse and
    representation.

17
Definitions of Racism
  • Principle III.
  • The conceptual content of this historic and
    politically-charged discursive field is sustained
    by racial agents who in many ways articulate and
    justify the suppression of "ideological
    blackness" (and every form of non-whiteness this
    may entail) which may be accomplished by many
    formal and informal means of institutional
    domination, routinized interpersonal
    interactions, cultural imperialism, or by any
    other racialized means of information control.

18
Definitions of Racism
  • Principle IV.
  • As a generative principle of racism, "ideological
    whiteness" refers to a dual behavioral process
    entailing enactments of identify formation and
    resource access legitimation, both of which were
    practices once overtly recognized as aspects of
    "white supremacy," but which now may be more
    subtly and covertly reproduced as an observable
    and routine set of implicitly prescriptive, but
    explicitly disavowed white supremacist beliefs
    and practices to which all who identify as
    'white' (or who behave as 'whitened') are
    expected to adhere--especially white males--if
    they wish to maintain their own racial standing
    as members of these two privileged 'white' groups
    and assert their negotiable right to privileged
    resource access.

19
Definitions of Racism
  • Principle V.
  • Collectively, the 'white' and/or 'whitened'
    members of this racially privileged global
    population tend to bolster their shared political
    intent to impose patterns of restricted resource
    access on racially subordinant populations, and
    aim to preserve their presumably non-negotiable
    right to prescribe, and even dictate, lessor
    resource access rights for certain upwardly
    mobile members of the 'non-white' population
    whose internalized racism, reliable complicity,
    and carefully scrutinized willingness to
    cooperate with racial dominates is always
    required and rewarded.
  • Dr. Helan Enoch Page Associate Professor,
    Anthropology Department University of
    Massachusetts-AmherstDistributed at the American
    Anthropological Association, 1993 Updated and
    extended, 1999

20
Definitions of Racism
  • A situation in which one race maintains supremacy
    over another race through a set of attitudes,
    behaviors, social structures and ideologies. It
    involves four essential and interconnected
    elements
  • Power the capacity to make and enforce decisions
    is disproportionately or unfairly distributed
  • Resources unequal access to such resources as
    money, education, information, etc.
  • Standards standards for appropriate behavior are
    ethnocentric, reflecting and privileging the
    norms and values of the dominant race/society
  • Problem involves defining "reality" by naming
    "the problem" incorrectly, and thus misplacing
    it.
  • Women's Theological Center, Boston, MA, 1994

21
Definitions of Racism
  • Racism - Racism involves physical, psychological,
    spiritual, and social control, exploitation and
    subjection of one race by another race. It is the
    social institutionalization of the psychological
    concept of White/white supremacy (a man-made
    ideology of white/White superiority and
    black/Black inferiority). This means that racial
    discrimination and injustice are established,
    perpetuated and promoted throughout every
    institution of society - economics, education,
    entertainment, family, labor, law, politics,
    religion, science and war. Racism is also used as
    an abuse excuse to rationalize violent behavior
    and inhumane policies toward Melanites.
  • Melanite/Melanites - Alternative term for the
    words "people of color," "minorities," and
    "non-whites."Phavia KujichaguliaRecognizing and
    Resolving Racism A Resource and Guide for Humane
    Beings

22
Definitions of Racism
  • Racism an underlying belief in the superiority
    of one race over another and its right to
    dominate.
  • generalizing one group of people by believing in
    simplistic stereotypes of that group.
  • affects every aspect of the lives of communities
    of color social, economic, political, health,
    etc.
  • may take three main forms (though all work
    together to maintain a system of oppression)
  • Individual Racism-individual acts that overtly
    reflect racist attitudes/beliefs. This is the
    easiest one to identify. ie. racial slurs, jokes,
    etc.
  • Systemic Racism and Institutional
    Racism-organizational policies and practices at
    the structural level that indirectly target
    communities of color and maintain white
    privilege. Ie. racism in the criminal justice
    system (police profiling) racism in the
    educational system (all white authors on a course
    reading list.)
  • Cultural Racism-value system that supports and
    allows discriminatory actions against racially
    and ethnoculturally marginalized communities. Ie.
    white privilege.
  • Anti-Racism Media Education (ARMEd)http//opirg.sa
    .utoronto.ca/armed/resources/definitions.html,
    December 20, 2002

23
Definitions of Racism
  • Racism - Racial prejudice and discrimination that
    are supported by institutional power and
    authority. The critical element that
    differentiates racism from prejudice and
    discrimination is the use of institutional power
    and authority to support prejudices and enforce
    discriminatory behaviors in systematic ways with
    far-reaching outcomes and effects. In the United
    States, racism is based on the ideology of White
    (European) supremacy and is used to the advantage
    of White people and the disadvantage of people of
    color
  • Enid Lee, Deborah Menkart and Margo Okazawa-Rey
    (eds.)Beyond Heroes and Holidays A Practical
    Guide to K-12 Anti-Racist, Multicultural
    Education and Staff Development 

24
Quotes
  • I think it affects me and I hate the fact it
    affects me, that I am aware. If I meet an
    Italian, an Irish person, or a German, I'm not
    aware. When I meet a person of color I'm
    immediately aware. That's...I mean I don't have a
    negative reaction, but I'm immediately aware. I
    don't like it. It bothers me. Go!

25
Quotes
  • A white woman says, it angers me when I hear
    people call black people 'niggers' or anything
    else derogatory....it makes me angry. Go!

26
Quotes
  • I've had a friend of mine who is black say to
    me, 'You know when you're not with me, if I go
    into a store, there's someone watching me
    thinking that I'm going to shoplift.' And I can't
    believe it. Not only does it bother me, it's
    really unbelievable to me. Go!
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