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Caste, race, ethnicity, nationality

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A community socially constructed and ultimately imagined by the people who ... not (and cannot be) based on quotidian face-to-face interaction between its members. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Caste, race, ethnicity, nationality


1
Caste, race, ethnicity, nationality
  • Are cultural inventions designed to create
    boundaries around one or another imagined
    community.

2
Imagined Community
  • A community socially constructed and ultimately
    imagined by the people who perceive themselves as
    part of that group.

3
Imagined Community
  • Is not (and cannot be) based on quotidian
    face-to-face interaction between its members.
    Instead, members hold in their minds a mental
    image of their affinity.

4
Benedict Anderson
  • A nation "is imagined because the members of even
    the smallest nation will never know most of their
    fellow-members, meet them, or even hear of them,
    yet in the minds of each lives the image of their
    communion".

5
  • None of the categories outlined maps onto
    permanent biological subdivisions within the
    human species, although members of societies that
    employ these categories often will invoke
    nature to reinforce their legitimacy.

6
Caste
  • The word caste comes from the Portuguese word
    casta, meaning chaste.
  • Portuguese explorers applied this word to the
    stratification systems they encountered in South
    Asia in the 15th century.

7
What is a date today in Canada?
8
Caste
  • These societies were divided into a hierarchy of
    ranked subgroups, each of which was chaste in
    the sense that sexual and marital links across
    group boundaries were forbidden.

9
  • In anthropological terms, we say that these
    groups are endogamous.

10
Endogamy
  • Marriage within a defined social group.

11
  • For this reason, many anthropologists agree that
    caste is fundamentally a form of kinship.

12
  • This endogamy, which is enforced, means that
    membership in such groups is determined by birth
    and for life.

13
  • In societies where descent is regarded as a
    crucial and persistent principle almost any
    social division can become stabilized in a
    caste-like form.

14
Castification
  • Political process by which ethnic or other groups
    become part of a rank order of some kind,
    probably orchestrated from the top, but which
    need not result in the construction of a caste
    system.

15
  • The principle of descent has also played a
    central role in the identification and
    persistence of race, ethnicity and nation.
  • These three categories are closely bound up with
    historical developments over the past 500 years
    that built the modern world.

16
Race
  • A human population category whose boundaries
    allegedly correspond to distinct sets of
    biological attributes.

17
  • The concept of race is biologically and
    genetically meaningless.

18
  • However, racial thinking persists at the
    beginning of the twenty-first century.
  • This means that racial categories have their
    origins not in biology but in society.

19
  • Race is a culturally constructed social category
    whose members are identified on the basis of
    certain selected phenotypic features that all of
    them are said to share.

20
  • The end result is a highly distorted set of
    criteria that members of a society can use to
    assign people they see to one or another
    culturally defined racial category.

21
  • Then, members can treat racial categories as if
    they reflect biological reality, using them to
    build institutions that include or exclude
    particular culturally defined races. In this way,
    race can become real in its consequences, even
    if it has no reality in biology.

22
Racialism
  • Belief in the existence of biologically distinct
    races.

23
Racism
  • The systematic oppression of one or more socially
    defined races by another socially defined
    race.

24
Ethnicity
  • A principle of social classification used to
    create groups based on selected cultural features
    such as language, religion or dress.
  • Ethnicity emerges from historical process that
    incorporate distinct social groups into a
    political structure under conditions of
    inequality.

25
Ethnicity
  • Develops as members of different groups try to
    make sense of the material constraints they
    experience within the political structure that
    confines them.
  • Is the struggle between self-ascription and
    other-ascription.

26
Self-Ascription
  • Insiders efforts to define their own identity.

27
Other-Ascription
  • Outsiders efforts to define the identities of
    other groups.

28
Ethnic Groups
  • Social groups that are distinguished from one
    another on the basis of ethnicity.

29
Colonialism
  • Because ethnic groups are incorporated into the
    colony on unequal terms, many individuals in the
    colonies attempted to achieve upward mobility by
    manipulating ethnicity.

30
Nation-States
  • A recent invention.
  • After the French Revolution, which discredited
    the right of kings, rulers needed to find a new
    basis upon which to legitimize their state
    authority.
  • The solution was to root political authority in
    nations.

31
Nations
  • Groups of people believed to share the same
    history, culture, language, and even the same
    physical substance.

32
  • Nations were associated with territories, as were
    states, and a nation-state came to be viewed as
    an ideal political unit in which national
    identity and political territory coincided.

33
  • The building of the first nation-states is
    closely associated with the rise of capitalism
    and its related cultural institutions.

34
  • The ideology of the nation-state implies that
    every nation is entitled to its own state. It
    also suggests that a state containing
    heterogeneous populations might be made into a
    nation if all peoples adopt a common nationality.

35
Nationality
  • A sense of identification with and loyalty to the
    nation-state.

36
Nationalism
  • (or nation-building)
  • Attempt made by government officials and state
    institutions to instill into citizens of a state
    a sense of nationality.

37
What is Canadian nationalism based upon?What
institutions participate in its creation and
reproduction?
38
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