Title: Chapters 12 and 13
1Chapters 12 and 13
- Modern Human Diversity Race and Racism and Human
Adaptation to the World
2Chapter Outline
- The History of Human Classification
- Race as a Biological Concept
- The Concept of Human Races
- The Social Significance of Race Racism
- Human Biological Diversity
- Adaptation to Environment
- Medical Anthropology
- Globalization and Health
3Human Diversity
- Humans are a single, highly variable species
inhabiting the entire globe. - Though biological processes are responsible for
human variation, the biological concept of race
cannot be applied to human diversity. - The vast majority of human variation exists
within populations rather than among populations.
4The History Of Human Classification
- Early European scholars tried to classify Homo
sapiens into subspecies based on geography and
features such as skin color, body size, head
shape, and hair texture. - The 18th- century Swedish naturalist Carolus
Linnaeus divided humans into subspecies based on
geography and classified all Europeans as
white, Africans as black, American Indians as
red, and Asians as yellow.
5The History Of Human Classification
- Historical efforts at classifying humanity into
higher and lower forms were based on factual
errors and ethnocentric prejudices regarding
race. - The notion of superior and inferior races had
been used to justify brutalities ranging from
repression to slavery to mass murder or genocide.
Ota Benga
6Race
- In biology, the taxonomic category of subspecies
that is not applicable to humans because the
division of humans into discrete types does not
represent the true nature of human biological
variation. - In some societies race is an important social
category.
7(No Transcript)
8Race as a Biological Concept
- In biology, a race is a population differing
geographically, morphologically, or genetically
from other populations of the same species. - There is no agreement on how many differences it
takes to make a race. - Any one race does not have exclusive possession
of any particular variant of any gene or genes. - The differences among individuals and within a
population are generally greater than the
differences among populations.
9People Vary Within Races
Sudanese women
African-American woman
Italian girl
Irish girl
10Racism
- A doctrine of superiority by which one group
justifies the dehumanization of others based on
their distinctive physical characteristics. - It is not just about discriminatory ideas,
values, or attitudes but is also a political
problem. - Racial conflicts result from social stereotypes,
not known scientific facts.
11Race and Behavior
- Many people have assumed there are behavioral
differences among human races. - The innate behavioral characteristics attributed
to race can be explained in terms of experience
as well as a hierarchical social order affecting
the opportunities and challenges faced by
different groups of people, rather than biology.
12Race and Intelligence
- In the United States, IQ testing was used in the
20th century to try to establish racial
differences in intelligence. - It is not possible to separate inherited
components of intelligence from those that are
culturally acquired.
13Skin Color A Case Study in Adaptation
- Skin color is a function of several factors
- transparency or thickness of the skin
- distribution of blood vessels
- amount of carotene and melanin
- Natural selection has favored pigmented skin as
protection against strong solar radiation of
equatorial latitudes. - In northern latitudes, natural selection has
favored depigmented skin, which can utilize weak
solar radiation in the production of vitamin D.
Clinal variation.
Guy from India
Kids from Africa
14Cultural and Biological Diversity
- Human gene pools still change in response to
external factors. - Many changes are the result of cultural
practices - Peoples with a dairying tradition possess the
ability to digest milk sugars (lactose) into
adulthood and a non- thrifty genotype. - Populations that are lactose intolerant retain
the thrifty genotype.
15Lactose
- A sugar that is the primary constituent of fresh
milk.
16Lactase
- An enzyme in the small intestine that enables
humans to assimilate lactose.
17Thrifty genotype
- Permits efficient storage of fat to draw on in
times of food shortage. - In times of scarcity, individuals with the
thrifty genotype conserve glucose (a simple
sugar) for use in brain and red blood cells as
well as nitrogen (vital for growth and health). - Regular access to glucose through the lactose in
milk led to selection for the non-thrifty
genotype as protection against adult-onset
diabetes.
18Hormone Disrupting Chemicals
- At least 51 chemicals, many in common use, are
known to disrupt hormones. - Included are such supposedly benign and inert
substances as plastics widely used in
laboratories and chemicals added to polystyrene
and polyvinyl chloride (PVCs) to make them more
stable and less breakable. - These plastics are used in plumbing, food
processing, and food packaging.
19Human Adaptation To Natural Environmental
Stressors
- Developmental adaptation a permanent phenotypic
variation derived from interaction between genes
and the environment during growth and development
(your body will change during early childhood
depending on where you live)
Secular Trend differences among generations that
allow anthros to make inferences about
environmental affects on growth and adaptation
20High Altitude Adaptation
- High altitude need more oxygen.
- Acclimatization When lowlanders in high
altitudes produce more red blood cells and
hemoglobin (this is a longer-term effect that
just breathing rapidly to physiologically adapt
to altitude)
21Adaptation to Cold
- Bergmans rule mammals that live in cold
climates are shorter and rounder than those that
live in warm climates - Allens rule mammals in cold climates have
shorter appendages than those living in warm
environments - Hunting response cyclic expansion and
contraction of blood vessels to get heat to the
lower extremities
22Adaptation to Hot
- Bergman and Allens rules apply here. The more
surface area on a body, the more sweat glands,
which is useful in warm environments. - Culture also helps with A/C, light clothing
Peruvian
Masai from Kenya
23Medical Anthropology
- A specialization of theoretical and applied
approaches from cultural and biological
anthropology to human health and disease - Medical system A patterned set of ideas and
practices relating to illness. - Disease A specific pathology a biological
abnormality - Illness The meanings and elaborations given to a
particular physical state
24Evolutionary Medicine
- An approach to human sickness and health
combining principles of evolutionary theory and
human evolutionary history - E.g., SIDS babies usually slept with their
mothers taking breathing cues - E.g., Morning sickness keep expectant mothers
from consuming anything harmful to the baby
25Political Ecology and Disease
- Simply describing disease in terms of biological
processes leaves out the deeper, ultimate reasons
that some individuals are more likely than others
to become sick - Case Study The Papua New Guinean case.
26Medical Pluralism
- The presence of multiple medical systems, each
with its own practices and beliefs in a society - Western biomedicine in combination with local
beliefs and healing practices makes for the best
type of medical care
27Globalization, Health, and Structural Violence
- Structural violence Physical/psychological harm
caused by exploitative and unjust social,
political, and economic systems - Health disparity A difference in the health
status between the wealthy elite and the poor in
stratified societies