"Race" Is a Four-Letter Word The Genesis of the Concept

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2005-02-17
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
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Summary

A tour de force work by a leading scholar, "Race" Is a Four-Letter Word explores the history of the concept of race in America, the reasons why the concept has no biological validity, and the ways in which it grew to become accepted as an idea that virtually everyone regards as self-evident.An ardent and eloquent opponent of typology, essentialism, and stereotyping, C. Loring Brace has based this engaging study on the "Problems of Race" course that he has taught at the University of Michigan for the past thirty-five years. Opening with an explanation of why the concept of race is biologically indefensible, "Race" Is a Four-Letter Word shows how the major elements of human biological variation have unrelated distributions and cannot be understood if the existence of "races" is assumed as a starting point. Thebook then examines the course of events that created the concept of race, journeying through time from Herodotus through Marco Polo; to the Renaissance and the role of the New World; on up to the American Civil War, the curious results of the alliance switch in World War I, Arthur Jensen, The BellCurve, J. Philippe Rushton, and the Pioneer Fund in the twenty-first century. Ideal as a supplementary text in anthropology courses, "Race" Is a Four-Letter Word can also be used in history of science courses and sociology courses. It is captivating reading for professionals and anyone else who seeks enlightenment on the socially debatable issue of "race."

Table of Contents

Preface:
Introduction:
The Biology of Human Variation
Background of a Belief
Adaptive Traits: Clines
The Perception Of Human Differences In The Past
What Shall We Call "Them?"
The Peasant Perspective
Antiquity
Renaissance
Enlightenment: The "Age of Reason"
Science and The Greatness of God
The Limits of Reason
Linnaeus and Classification
Buffon and Continuity
Camper and the Facial Angle
Assessing the Meaning of Human Differences
One Origin Or Many?
The Roots of "Polygenism"
Monogenism
Anthropology In The Enlightenment
Blumenbach and "Degeneration"
The Scottish Enlightenment Comes to America
"Race" From the Perspective of the American Enlightenment
The Triumph of Feeling Over Reason
Romanticism
Phrenology
The Founding Of The American School Of Anthropology
The Postcolonial United States of America
Morton and the American Origin of Biological Anthropology
Passing The Torch
Archetypical American
The Demise Of Monogenism And The Rise Of Polygenism
The Last Monogenist
The Voice of American Racialism
Scotland
France
Toward A War Over Slavery And Afterward
"Race" and Politics
War and Its Aftermath
The French Connection
Paul Broca and the Professionalization of Biological Anthropology
The Legacy Of The American School In America
Nathaniel Southgate Shaler (1841-1906)
The First World War
The French Connection and the Concept of "Race"
William Z. Ripley and the Magic Three
Madison GrantLothrop Stoddard
The Ethos Of Eugenics
Eugenics
Eugenics Exported to America
Germany"Race" and Eugenics Applied to the Shaping of America
Henry Ford And The Ethos Of The Holocaust
The Anti-Semitism of Henry Ford
The Protocols of the Elders of Zion
The Outlook Of The "Bigot Brigade"
"Race" and "Intelligence"
Statistical Theology and the Worship of Sir Cyril Burt: "Scientific" Fraud
The Galtonian Legacy In America
World War I"Intelligence" and Immigration
Lewis Terman and Genetic Predestination
Walter Lippmann Versus the Termanites
"Race" In Biological Anthropology
Ales Hrdlicka and the Smithsonian: Organizing the Profession
Academia and the Patterns of Thought in Biological Anthropology: Sir Arthur Keith
Keith's Influence on America: Earnest Albert Hooton
Carleton Coon on "Race"
Science and Society on "Race" After World War II
The Legacy of the Pioneer Fund
The Promotion of "Scientific" Racism
Jensenism
The Bell Curve
Apostle of Apartheid
Richard Lynn
"Otherism"
Afterthoughts
Sources Cited
Index
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved.

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