Racial Perceptions in Contemporary America

A more charged issue than racism there is not. No matter what your bloodline, it is nigh impossible not to step on some toes or inadvertently cause grave offense while exploring race and racial differences. Race is of enormous importance to the structure and functioning of this society, and most people define themselves at least in part by their race and ethnicity. Whether prideful or shameful, it is part of who they are. What's more, most people define others at least in part by their race and ethnicity. Or, perhaps more specifically, by the color of their skin. But for the handful of superficial ways races are classified by the lay public --the easily distinguished physical features separating Caucasians from Africans from Asians from Indians-- rarely is race truly being considered. Rather, it is culture. Racial classifications serve to exercise the ethnocentricism and xenophobia woven into American society. They let people articulate a dislike for others without acknowledging the true linguistic, religious and cultural aversion standing behind their feelings.

Perhaps we should begin by acknowledging that, by the standards of modern anthropology, race as a classification for humans is arbitrary at best and, from some perspectives, impossible. Classing humans by skin color is no more meaningful than by lactose tolerance, fingerprints, or resistance to malaria. Using any of those methods would divide the human population up in different ways, and no one arrangement has inherent significance. However, for our purposes we will consider race as a function exclusively of skin color and certain subtle physical differences. Not only are skin color and physical differences the traditional markers of race, but are also perhaps the only recognized by the laity.

Indeed, when most people speak of race they speak of obvious physical traits readily perceivable and easy to distinguish. The dark-skinned Africans with broad noses and tightly curled hair. The very light-skinned Europeans with narrower noses and straight hair of various colors. The brown-skinned Arabs and East Africans with black, straight hair. The tan-skinned Asians and Pacific Islanders with black hair and narrow eyes. One could go on, but it is these kind of genetically inherited and geographically distinctive traits that most people pay attention to. Obvious physical differences are, to most people, all race is.

Skin color is a favorite focus, although hardly the only variation. Human skin ranges, with some connection to distance from the equator, from a dark black to a very light tan. In between are all flavors of brown and tan, brownish yellows and brownish reds. In that your skin and, of course, your skin color covers your entire body it is perhaps easier to determine what skin color group one belongs to than anything else. And despite the enormous variation in color across the species and the capacity for stunning variation within races, often all it takes is a quick glance to place one in a color group. This ease of differentiation is what makes race as skin color so popular, and so difficult to effect. Skin color can be determined from vast distances, is virtually impossible to conceal or counterfeit, and serves as a very reliable indicator of racial classification. That is, of course, for the more uniquely pronounced races such as Caucasians, Africans, or Asians. With easy classification, though, comes easy discrimination. Perhaps a true advantage of race as lactose tolerance or as malaria resistance would be the difficulty in making those kinds of instant classifications. You could be a minority in a majority of lactose intolerant peoples, but it would be difficult or impossible to focus on an individual without the kind of unmistakable visual indicator that is skin color. But with the historical focus on skin color as race, this is what society has taught us to consider.

The facial features and physical dimensions that reflect skin color are likewise important, if less obvious and articulatable. Races represent pockets of a species geographically isolated long enough to begin evolving away from each other. Whether that movement conforms to the environment through natural selection, or the arbitrary wanderings of sexual selection and random chance, the body itself changes. Those changes are not limited to skin color, but affect muscle mass, fat deposits, height, skeletal structure, skull shape, the elasticity of tendons, body surface area and countless other variables. Some, such as facial features, are more easily noticeable and hence, more important to the public interpretation of race. One could even make the argument that facial features are more important than skin color. Indeed, the Caucasian who --if kept out of the sun-- would be the same pale, pasty white of this author could tan their skin to a deep brown and still never have their race questioned. And with the enormous variation within races, regardless of how light an African's skin is, they will probably never be confused for anything but African. This is the power of facial features. When the skin gives conflicting or questionable signals, one can determine racial group by facial features alone.

Skin color, physical features, and especially facial features are perhaps the only conscious consideration of race for the lay public. But is there more going on below the surface? Race is a convenient extension of the ethnocentricism and xenophobia built into most societies, and undeniably present in American society. The majority of people who would be considered racist by modern standards, are not actually concerned with race per say. They are concerned with culture. They are concerned with the cultural division between their culture or sub culture, and another culture or sub culture. The differences between black America and white America are vast. Certainly enough to create the "us" and "them" dichotomy commonly attributed to racial disparity. True white racists, those who feel that the Caucasian bloodline is superior to other races, are a slim if vocal minority. Most whites who dislike the black race, and would accordingly think themselves racist probably don't care what color African skin really is. They probably don't have any feelings on genetic superiority. They probably don't really mind racial interbreeding. They probably don't have visions of exterminating non-Caucasian races. What they mind, on the other hand, is a black American culture which is distinctly different from their own, which they don't understand, and which they can see becoming more prominent. True racists are rare. More common is mere ethnocentricism born out of fear and ignorance, but which must certainly be more benign.

The culture clash --or perhaps more commonly, the sub culture clash-- has deep roots. Differences, even between cultures as similar as black America and white America, are easy to find when they are being sought. Music is a point easily brushed aside as the entitlement of personal preference. Rap, rhythm and blues, jazz, blues and other flavors of African-American music have all seen mixed reactions from white America. Barring empirical evidence, it has been this author's experience that the same cultural racists discussed above reject black music not on artistic grounds, but the superfluous cultural prejudice one might expect. The act of embracing black music and art is an indication of at least coming to terms with the "alien" African American culture.

Language plays no small part in American pseudo-racism. Witness the hubbub over Ebonics some years ago, and the clamor that proposals to incorporate it into education raised. Language is the key to a culture, and likewise, a foreign language symbolizes the disparity between two peoples. People fear languages they don't understand, and are very suspicious of comments made in foreign tongues. Not only can it be rude and excluding, but also social interaction depends on the communication of defined symbols. When the symbols become meaningless, the social situations are difficult or impossible to follow. Ebonics, or the urban English so commonly associated with African-Americans (see, Standard African American English), is a barrier of miscommunication between black America and white America. While certainly not as separating as a language, the dialect oozes disconnection from white America. That separation only reinforces the cultural division, and accents the disparity between black and white.

It doesn't help that Africans are so easily differentiated from Europeans. America has assimilated foreign cultures before, but only European cultures. It remains to be seen if white and black America will ever converge, and if that will resolve racism. Historically, an influx of foreign people carrying an alien culture has always been met with derision. Some 30 million Europeans immigrated to the United States at the turn of the century. First came the Irish, then the Italians, then the Poles. Each were discriminated against, but some more than others. The Irish were held apart from continental Europeans and were seen even as non-white until the later half of the 20th century. Those separations were cultural, but assumed a racial tone until the Irish shook off the stereotypes and were accepted as white.

It is an old explanation, if not a publicly accepted one, that racism is often mistaken for mere cultural aversion. Not that ethnocentricism is that much better, but perhaps a first step to combating racism in America would be acknowledging what it truly is. The convenience of separating peoples by race might be too great to ignore, and the best we can hope for may be acceptance and convergence on a cultural level, rather than blindness on a racial level.


A mouth-watering contribution to the Noding things you've written before project.
This was originally for an anthropology class, of which I barely passed anyway, now that I think about it...

When I was in the 6th grade I can recall having a heated discussion with several other kids about the non-existence of race. It would start with the question of what race you were, a trick question because I knew there was no such thing as race. I would then proceed to point this out to them, which earned me funny looks and occasionally name calling. On days when I was feeling sassy I would whip out the old standby in response to this quesiton: human. I have no idea where I learned that there was no such thing as race, I just know that by the time I was in the 6th grade this concept had somehow been introduced to me.

Since then I have often stumbled over the question on applications for jobs, scholarships, you name it if it has a form there is a selection box asking for your race. A few institutions have realized the error and switched the wording to ethnicity, but many plow on with their tired application forms never getting updated. This usage of race and ethnicity as interchangeable terms is a constant problem. Before you can really understand how race operates in contemporary society you need to know how it evolved in the first place.

The idea of race, which is regularly confused with ethnicity, was developed in the 18th century. Often people believe that in order for one group to dominate over another they use racial qualities, however what they really use are ethnic qualities. When the English were colonizing the New World they began developing new attitudes about other groups, specifically about the native Americans whom they were having a hard time assimilating. Prior to this they had decided that people were born into their roles, that blacks were born to be slaves and so should be treated thusly. The blacks they enslaved had not been efficient at revolting against such treatment and eventually fell "in line" as servants to the whites. The native Americans were not so easily enslaved. They resisted servitude and in many cases fought back violently enough to stun their would-be-captors. The inability to easily dominate over another group seen as being inherently 'less' sparked a change in attitude. Natives became labeled as 'savages' and occasionally 'noble savages.'

Two centuries earlier the Irish, who've had a long history with the English, began to be labeled in a 'savage' way as well. Their hatred of the Irish culture had the English labeling them as an 'other.' Racism, and therefore race, emerged as a way to label the hated 'other' and classify them socially. In black/white relationships in North America this social classification was used to separate black rights from white rights using legislation in the 1600s that applied stiff penalties for 'fornicating' with blacks and formalized their servitude as well as the use of corporal punishment. In the 1700s this was deepened using the concept of what is 'natural' and what isn't. It became unnatural to fornicate or intermarry with those outside your 'race,' especially blacks. The increase in racist legislation at this time was reflective of an increase in US born politicians who wanted to secure their holdings by controlling the growing number of servants and slaves. By the 1800s the creation of race insured that even poor whites had more rights than blacks did.

Even monuments and memorials play a part in the social divide caused by race. Monuments erected during the Jim Crow era were used to further subordinate blacks by not just commemorating generals and other military personnel during the Civil War but also "faithful slaves.' In the case of the Heyward Shepherd monument in Harpers Ferry the memorial was used as a vehicle to villianze John Brown. Brown tried to incite a slave rebellion so they could defeat the southern invaders and then move south to free more slaves. His effort failed when no blacks came to his aid and he was hung. Heyward Shepherd was a free black that lived and worked in the area and was, incidentally, the first person killed in the raid. Southerners legitimized slavery by memorializing those that "did not rebel against their masters" and Heyward Shepherd fulfilled this role at Harpers Ferry.


Reference

Shackel, Paul. 2003 Memory in Black and White: Race, Commemoration, and the Post-Bellum Landscape. Altamira Press.
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