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Ethnicity

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Title: Ethnicity


1
14
Ethnicity
AnthropologyThe Exploration of Human
Diversity 11th Edition Conrad Phillip Kottak
2
Ethnicity
  • Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Ethnic Groups, Nations, and Nationalities
  • Peaceful Coexistence
  • Roots of Ethnic Conflict

3
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Ethnic groupmembers share certain beliefs,
    values, habits, customs, and norms because of
    their common background

Ethnicity revealed when people claim a certain
ethnic identity for themselves and are defined by
others as having that identity
4
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Race is ethnic group assumed to have a biological
    basis
  • American culture doesnt draw a very clear line
    between ethnicity and race.

Ethnicityidentification with, and feeling part
of, an ethnic group and exclusion from certain
other groups because of this affiliation
5
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Race/Ethnic Identification in the United States,
    2002
  • Insert Table 14.1

6
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Statusvarious positions that people occupy in
    society
  • Ascribed statuslittle or no choice about
    occupying status
  • People are born members of a certain group and
    remain so all their lives
  • Achieved statusgained through choices, actions,
    efforts, talents, or accomplishments
  • May be positive or negative

7
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Social Statuses
  • Insert Figure 14.1

8
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Status Shifting
  • Sometimes statuses, particularly ascribed ones,
    mutually exclusive

9
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Some statuses arent mutually exclusive, but
    contextual
  • Minority Groupsascribed status associated with a
    position in the social-political hierarchy
  • They have inferior power and less secure access
    to resources than majority groups, which are
    superordinate, dominant, or controlling

10
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Race, like ethnicity, is cultural category rather
    than a biological reality
  • Not possible to define races biologically
  • American culture does not draw a very clear line
    between them
  • Better to use term ethnic group instead of
    race to describe any social group

11
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Social Race
  • Races are ethnic groups assumed by members of a
    particular culture to have biological basis
  • Race is socially constructed

Social Racesgroups assume to have biological
basis but actually define in a culturally
arbitrary, rather than scientific, manner
12
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • In American culture, one acquires his or her
    racial identity at birth
  • Rule of Descentassigns social identity on basis
    of ancestry
  • Hypodescentautomatically places children of a
    union or mating between members of different
    groups in the minority group
  • Helps divide American society into groups that
    have been unequal in access to wealth, power, and
    prestige

13
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Race in the Census
  • U.S. Census Bureau gathering data by race since
    1790
  • Constitution specified that a slave counted as
    three-fifths of a white person, and Indians not
    taxed
  • Attempt by social scientists and interested
    citizens to add a multiracial category to the
    census category opposed by NAACP and National
    Council of La Raza

Racial classification is a political issue
14
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Race in the Census
  • Number of interracial marriages and children
    increasing in U.S.
  • Implications for the traditional system of
    American racial classification

15
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Race in the Census
  • Canadian census asks about visible minorities
  • ...persons, other than Aboriginal peoples
    (a.k.a. First Nation in Canada, Native Americans
    in the United States, who are non-Caucasian in
    race or non-white in colour
  • Canadas visible minority population increasing
    steadily

16
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Figure 14.2
  • Reproduction of Questions on Race and Hispanic
    Origin from Census 2000

17
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Figure 14.2
  • Reproduction of Questions on Race and Hispanic
    Origin from Census 2000

18
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Table 14.3
  • American Reporting They Belonged to Just One Race

19
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Table 14.4
  • Canadian Visible Minority Population of Canada,
    2001 Census

20
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Not Us Race in Japan
  • In 1986, former Japanese Prime Minister Nakasone
    created international furor by contrasting his
    countrys supposed homogeneity (responsible, he
    suggested, for Japans success in international
    business) with the ethnically mixed U.S.

21
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Scholars estimate 10 of Japans population
    minorities of various sorts
  • Intrinsic racismbelief that perceived racial
    difference is a sufficient reason to value one
    person less than another

In Japan, the valued group is majority (pure)
Japanese, who are believed to share the same
blood
22
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Children of mixed marriages between majority
    Japanese and others may not get the same racial
    label as the minority parent, but they are still
    stigmatized for their non-Japanese ancestry

23
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Majority Japanese define themselves by opposition
    to others
  • Japanese culture regards certain ethnic groups as
    having a biological basis, when there is no
    evidence they do
  • Burakumin are descendants of a low-status social
    class but genetically indistinguishable from the
    dominant population, they are treated as a
    different race
  • Discrimination against burakumin strikingly like
    discrimination that blacks faced in U.S.

24
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Phenotype and Fluidity Race in Brazil
  • Race in Brazil different from race in U.S. and
    Japan

25
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • The Brazilian construction of race is attuned to
    relatively slight phenotypic differences
  • Phenotypeorganisms evident traits, its
    physiology and anatomy, including skin color,
    hair form, facial features, and eye color

More than 500 distinct racial labels reported
26
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • The Brazilian construction
  • Brazilian race far more flexible, in that
    individuals racial classification may change due
    to achieved status, developmental biological
    changes, and other irregular factors
  • No hypodescent rule ever developed in Brazil to
    ensure that whites and blacks remained separate

27
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Stratification and Intelligence
  • Over the centuries, groups with power used racial
    ideology to justify, explain, and preserve their
    privileged social positions

Anthropologists know that most behavioral
variation among human groups rests on culture not
biology
28
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Stratification and Intelligence
  • Within any stratified society, differences in
    performance between economic, social, and ethnic
    groups reflect their different experiences and
    opportunities rather than biological differences

Stratified Societyclass-based society
29
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Occasionally, doctrines of innate superiority are
    set forth by scientists, who tend to come from
    the favored stratum of society

30
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Jensenism asserts that African-Americans are
    hereditarily incapable of doing as well as whites
  • Named for Arthur Jensen, the educational
    psychologist who observed that on average
    African-Americans perform less well on
    intelligence tests that Euro-Americans and
    Asian-Americans.
  • Environmental explanations for test scores much
    more convincing than genetic explanations

31
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Tests invariably measure particular learning
    histories, not the potential for learning
  • Links between social, economic, and educational
    environment and test performance show up in
    comparisons of American blacks and whites
  • Studies of identical twins raised apart also
    illustrate the impact of environment on identical
    heredity

32
Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity
  • Studies provide overwhelming evidence that test
    performance measures education and social,
    economic, and cultural background rather than
    genetically determined intelligence

All contemporary human populations seem to have
comparable learning abilities
33
Ethnic Groups, Nations, and Nationalities
  • Nationonce synonymous with tribe or ethnic
    group has come to mean a state
  • Stateindependent, centrally organized political
    unit
  • Nation-statesrefer to an autonomous political
    entity

34
Ethnic Groups, Nations, and Nationalities
  • Most nation-states are ethnically heterogeneous
  • Migration
  • Conquest
  • Colonialism

35
Ethnic Groups, Nations, and Nationalities
  • Nationalities and Imagined Communities
  • Nationalitiesethnic groups that now have, or
    wish to have or regain, autonomous political
    status (their own country)

36
Ethnic Groups, Nations, and Nationalities
  • Nationalities are imagined communities
    (Benedict Anderson)
  • Members do not form actual face-to-face community
  • Only imagine that they belong to and participate
    in the same group
  • Stresses that language and print played crucial
    role in growth of European national consciousness

37
Ethnic Groups, Nations, and Nationalities
  • Political upheavals and wars divided many
    nationalities

Migration causes certain nationally based ethnic
groups to live in different nation states
38
Ethnic Groups, Nations, and Nationalities
  • Colonial powers created multiethnic states

Erected boundaries that corresponded poorly with
preexisting cultural divisions
39
Ethnic Groups, Nations, and Nationalities
  • Colonial institutions also helped create new
    imagined communities beyond nations
  • Négritudeblack association and identity,
    developed out of common experience of French
    colonial rule in variety of African countries

40
Peaceful Coexistence
  • Ethnic diversity may be associated with positive
    group interaction and coexistence or with conflict

41
Peaceful Coexistence
  • Assimilation
  • Process of change when a minority ethnic group
    adopts the patterns and norms of its host culture
  • Melting pot model

42
Peaceful Coexistence
  • The Plural Society
  • Ethnic distinctions can be maintained, rather
    than assimilated, despite decades, or even
    generations, of interethnic contact

43
Peaceful Coexistence
  • Barth defines plural society as society combining
    ethnic contrasts and the economic interdependence
    of the ethnic groups

Ethnic boundaries are most stable and enduring
when the groups occupy different ecological niches
44
Peaceful Coexistence
  • Ethnic Nationalism Runs Wild
  • Yugoslavia fell apart mainly along ethnic and
    religious lines in the 1990s
  • Much of ethnic differentiation based on religion,
    culture, political and military history, and some
    differences in language
  • Yugoslav Serbs reacted violentlywith military
    interventionafter 1992 vote for independence of
    Muslim-led Bosnia Herzegovina

45
Peaceful Coexistence
  • Ethnic Nationalism Runs Wild
  • Backed by Yugoslav army, Bosnian Serb militias
    rounded up Bosnian Muslims, killed groups of
    them, and burned and looted their homes
  • In spring 1999 NATO began bombing campaign
    against Yugoslavia in retaliation for Serbian
    atrocities

46
Peaceful Coexistence
  • Ethnic Nationalism Runs Wild
  • How can we explain Yugoslavias ethnic conflict?

Ethnic distinctions represent peoples
perceptions of cultural differences, and people
may overlook even very strong cultural
similarities when circumstances make their
differences more important
47
Peaceful Coexistence
  • Multiculturalism and Ethnic Identity
  • Multiculturalismthe view of cultural diversity
    in a country as something good and desirable
  • Opposite of assimilationism
  • Multicultural society socializes individuals no
    only into the dominant (national) culture but
    also into an ethnic culture

48
Peaceful Coexistence
  • In U.S. and Canada, multiculturalism is of
    growing importance
  • Reflects an awareness that the number and size of
    ethnic groups grew dramatically in recent years

49
Peaceful Coexistence
  • Ethnic Composition of the United States Figure
  • 14.4

50
Peaceful Coexistence
  • One response to ethnic diversification and
    awareness has been for many whites to reclaim
    ethnic identities

Mutliculturalism seeks ways for people to
understand and interact that dont depend on
sameness but rather on respect for differences
51
Peaceful Coexistence
  • Several forces propelled North America away from
    assimilation model toward multiculturalism
  • Reflects recent large-scale migration
  • Multiculturalism related to globalization
  • Ethnic identities used increasingly to form
    self-help organizations focused mainly on
    enhancing the groups economic competitiveness

52
Peaceful Coexistence
  • In face of globalization, much of the world is
    experiencing an ethnic revival

53
Roots of Ethnic Conflict
  • Can be political, economic, religious,
    linguistic, cultural, or racial
  • Ethnic difference often lead to conflict and
    violence because of a sense of injustice due to
    resource distribution, economic and/or political
    competition, and reaction to discrimination,
    prejudice, and other expression of threatened or
    devalued identity

54
Roots of Ethnic Conflict
  • Prejudice and Discrimination
  • Prejudicedevaluation of given group based upon
    assumed characteristics of that group
  • Discriminationdisproportionately harmful
    treatment of a group it may be de facto
    (practiced, but not legally sanctioned) or de
    jure (part of the law)

Stereotypesfixed ideas, often unfavorable, about
what the members of a group are like
55
Roots of Ethnic Conflict
  • Although multicultural model increasingly
    prominent in North America, ethnic competition
    and conflict are just as evident

56
Roots of Ethnic Conflict
  • Ethnic antagonism flared in South-Central Los
    Angeles in spring 1992
  • Angry blacks reacted to the acquittal of 4 white
    police officers charged in the videotaped beating
    of Rodney King
  • Attacked whites, Koreans, and Latinos
  • Violence expressed frustration by African
    Americans about their prospects in an
    increasingly multicultural society

57
Roots of Ethnic Conflict
  • Aftermaths of Oppression
  • Ethnocidedominant group may try to destroy the
    cultures of certain ethnic groups
  • Forced assimilationdominant group forces certain
    ethnic groups to adopt the dominant culture

58
Roots of Ethnic Conflict
  • Aftermaths of Oppression
  • Ethnic expulsionaims at removing groups who are
    culturally different from a country

Refugeespeople who have been forced (involuntary
refugees) or who have chosen (voluntary refugees)
to flee a country, to escape persecution or war
59
Roots of Ethnic Conflict
  • Aftermaths of Oppression
  • Colonialismpolitical, social, economic, and
    cultural domination of a territory and its people
    by a foreign power for an extended time

Cultural colonialisminternal domination by one
group and its culture/ideology over others
60
Roots of Ethnic Conflict
  • First, Second, and Third Worlds
  • Insert Figure 14.5
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