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Modern Human Diversity: Race and Racism

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Title: Modern Human Diversity: Race and Racism


1
Chapter 12
  • Modern Human Diversity Race and Racism

2
Chapter Preview
  • What Is the History of Human Classification?
  • Is the Biological Concept of Race Useful for
    Studying Physical Variation in the Human Species?
  • Is studying differences in Intelligence Among
    Populations Valid?
  • What are the cause of Physical Variability?

3
  • What Is the History of Human Classification?

4
The History of Human Classification
  • European scholars of the 18th through early 20th
    centuries classified humans into a series of
    subspecies based on geography and features such
    as skin color, body size, head shape, and hair
    texture.
  • Some scholars went a step further and placed
    these types into a hierarchical framework in
    which the white race was considered superior to
    other races racism.

5
The History of The Race Concept
  • Race refers to subspecies, and no subspecies
    exist within modern Homo sapiens.
  • In the past, phenotypic differences - skin color,
    body size, head shape, and hair texture were
    used to identify different races
  • Anthropologists have worked to expose the fallacy
    of race as a biological concept while recognizing
    the existence of race as a social construct.

6
Biased Research
  • The work of 19th-century Philadelphia physician
    Samuel Morton is an example of biased research
    conducted to justify prejudices.
  • He measured a series of skulls to demonstrate
    the supposed biological superiority of groups of
    people through features of skull shape and size.

7
  • Is the Biological Concept of Race Useful for
    Studying Physical Variation in the Human Species?

8
The Race Concept in Biology
  • In biology, a population of a species that
    differs in the frequency of the variants of some
    gene or genes from other populations of the same
    species.

9
Factors in the Biological Definition of Race
  • It is arbitrary 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.
  • Populations are genetically open, meaning that
    genes flow between them and no fixed racial
    groups exist.
  • The differences among individuals and within a
    population are generally greater than the
    differences among populations.

10
Dermatoglyphics Fingerprint Patterns
  • Fingerprint patterns of loops, whorls, and
    arches are genetically determined. Grouping
    people on this basis would place most Europeans,
    sub-Saharan Africans, and East Asians together as
    loops, Australian aborigines and the people of
    Mongolia together as whorls, and central
    Europeans and the Bushmen of southern Africa
    together as arches.

11
Racial Variation
  • Yao Ming, center for the Houston Rockets,
    receives his Special Olympics Global Ambassador
    jersey from athlete Xu Chuang (left) and Special
    Olympics East Asia President Dicken Yung.
  • Standing side-by-side, these three individuals
    illustrate the wide range of variation seen
    within a single so-called racial category.

12
The Concept Of Human Races
  • While the biological race concept is not
    applicable to human variation, race exists as a
    cultural category.
  • The confusion of social with biological factors
    is frequently combined with prejudices that then
    serve to exclude whole categories of people from
    certain roles or positions in society.
  • Anthropologists have abandoned the race concept
    as being of no particular utility in
    understanding human biological variation.

13
Persecution and Racial Identity
  • Conflict in Darfur between the Janjaweed, a
    militia group recruited from local Arab tribes,
    and the non-Arab peoples of the region is a major
    humanitarian crisis.
  • The number of internally displaced persons in
    Darfur was estimated to be 1.65 million, with an
    additional 200,000 refugees from Darfur fleeing
    to Chad.

14
Racism
  • A doctrine of racial superiority by which one
    group asserts its superiority over another.
  • Racist individuals react on the basis of social
    stereotypes instead of scientific facts.
  • Behavioral characteristics attributed to race can
    be explained with culture rather than biology.

15
  • Is studying differences in Intelligence Among
    Populations Valid?

16
Race and Intelligence
  • A question often asked by those unfamiliar with
    the fallacy of biological race in humans is
    whether some races are inherently more
    intelligent than others.
  • But, what do we mean by the term intelligence?

17
What is Intelligence?
  • Most psychologists consider intelligence to be
    the product of the interaction of different sorts
    of cognitive abilities verbal,
    mathematical-logical, spatial, linguistic,
    musical, bodily kinesthetic, social, and
    personal.
  • Each may be thought of as a particular kind of
    intelligence, unrelated to the others.

18
Intelligence and IQ
  • some psychologists insist that intelligence is a
    single quantifiable thing measured by IQ tests
  • IQ tests measure performance (something that one
    does) rather than genetic disposition (something
    that the individual was born with). Performance
    on the test reflects past experiences and present
    motivational state, as well as innate ability

19
Intelligence and IQ
  • The tests do not measure intelligence per se, but
    the ability, conditioned by culture, of certain
    individuals to respond appropriately to certain
    questions conceived by Americans of European
    descent for comparable middle-class whites.

20
The Bell Curve Controversy
  • Herrnstein and Murray argued that the difference
    in IQ scores between Americans of African, Asian,
    and European descent is primarily determined by
    genetic factors and is therefore immutable.

21
The Bell Curve Controversy
  • They were criticized for
  • violating basic rules of statistics
  • utilizing studies, no matter how flawed, that
    appear to support their thesis while ignoring or
    barely mentioning those that contradict it
  • Ignoring the fact that genes are inherited
    independently of one another such that the
    alleles associated with intelligence bear no
    relationship with the ones for skin pigmentation
    or with any other aspect of human variation such
    as blood type

22
General Flaws in Studies of Intelligence
  • Studies attempting to document biological
    differences generally involve comparisons among
    racesa category that for humans is biologically
    false.
  • Cultures vary in terms of aspects of
    intelligence.
  • Most tests used to measure intelligence are
    biased toward the dominant culture.
  • Intelligence cannot be linked to evolutionary
    forces acting in a particular environment.

23
  • What are the cause of Physical Variability?

24
Human Biological Diversity
  • Physical variability is a product of genetic
    variation as it is expressed in a particular
    environment.
  • Some physical traits are controlled by single
    genes, with variation present in alternate forms
    of the gene (alleles).
  • Physical characteristics are controlled by
    multiple genes and are thus expressed
    continuously.
  • Because evolutionary forces act on each physical
    trait independently, human biological variation
    can be studied only one trait at a time.

25
Human Biological Diversity
  • The physical characteristics of populations and
    individuals are a product of the interaction
    between genes and environments.
  • Genes predispose people to a particular skin
    color, but an individuals skin color is also
    influenced by cultural and environmental factors.

26
Human Biological Diversity
  • Polymorphic traits used to describe species
    with alternative forms (alleles) of particular
    genes
  • Polytypic traits the expression of genetic
    variants in different frequencies in different
    populations of a species

27
Human Biological Diversity
  • For characteristics controlled by a single gene
    (polymorphic), different versions of that gene,
    known as alleles, mediate variation.
  • Example Blood type may appear in any of four
    distinct phenotypic forms (A, B, O, and AB).
  • When polymorphisms of a species are distributed
    into geographically dispersed populations,
    biologists describe this species as polytypic
    (many types).
  • Example In the distribution of the polymorphism
    for blood type, the human species is polytypic.

28
Clines
  • Anthropologists study biological diversity in
    terms of clines, or the continuous gradation over
    space in the form or frequency of a trait.
  • The Clinal analysis of a continuous trait such as
    body shape, which is controlled by a series of
    genes, allows anthropologists to interpret human
    global variation in body build as an adaptation
    to climate.

29
Clines and the Frequency of Type B Blood in Europe
30
Epicanthic Eye Fold
  • The epicanthic eye fold is common among people
    native to East Asia.
  • While some anthropologists have suggested that
    this feature might be an adaptation to cold,
    genetic drift could also be responsible for the
    frequency of this trait among people of East Asia.

31
Lactose Intolerance
  • Example of culture acting as an agent of
    biological selection.
  • The ability to digest lactose, the primary
    constituent of fresh milk, depends on the
    capacity to make the lactase enzyme.

32
Lactose Intolerance
  • A high retention of lactase (an enzyme in the
    small intestine that enables humans to assimilate
    lactose) is found in populations with a long
    tradition of dairying
  • 10- 30 of Americans of African descent and
    0-30 of adult Asians are lactose tolerant.
  • Lactose tolerance are normal for 80 of adults of
    northern European descent.

33
Thrifty 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 for use in brain and
    red blood cells.
  • Regular access to glucose through the lactose in
    milk led to selection for the non-thrifty
    genotype as protection against adult-onset
    diabetes.

34
Thrifty Genotype
  • Populations that are lactose intolerant retain
    the thrifty genotype.
  • When they are introduced to Western diets, the
    incidence of obesity and diabetes skyrockets.

35
Skin Color A Case Study in Adaptation
  • Skin color is subject to great variation and is
    attributed to several key factors
  • the transparency or thickness of the skin
  • a copper-colored pigment called carotene
  • reflected color from the blood vessels
  • the amount of melanin , a dark pigment, in the
    skins outer layer

36
Factors in Variation of Skin Color
  • Exposure to sunlight increases the amount of
    melanin, darkening the skin.
  • Selective mating, as well as geographic location,
    plays a part in skin color distribution.

37
Distribution of Human Skin Pigmentation before
1492
38
Skin Color and Human Evolution
  • How long did it take for light pigmentation to
    develop in populations living outside the
    tropics?
  • We can use the settlement of Greater Australia
    60,000 ya to examine this question.

39
Skin Color and Human Evolution
  • The first Australians came from tropical
    Southeast Asia, spreading throughout Australia
    eventually to what is now the island of Tasmania,
    with a latitude and levels of ultraviolet
    radiation similar to New York City, Rome, or
    Beijing.
  • As aboriginal Australians originally came from
    the tropics, we would expect them to have had
    darkly pigmented skin.

40
Skin Color and Human Evolution
  • In Australia, those populations that spread south
    of the tropics (where, as in northern latitudes,
    ultraviolet radiation is less intense) underwent
    some reduction of pigmentation but their skin
    color is still far darker than that of Europeans
    or East Asians.

41
Skin Color and Human Evolution
  • Therefore, it seems that it takes more than
    60,000 years to produce significant
    depigmentation.
  • It may also be that Europeans and East Asians
    may have lived outside the tropics for far longer
    than the people of Tasmania or that settlement in
    latitudes even more distant from the equator were
    required for depigmentation to occur.
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