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RACE, ETHNICITY AND CULTURE:Similarity in Human Adaptations

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Introduction to Cultural Anthropology ­ SOC401
VU
Lesson 34
RACE, ETHNICITY AND CULTURE
Ethnicity
Ethnicity refers to selected cultural and sometimes physical characteristics used to classify people into
(ethnic) groups or categories considered to be significantly different from others. Commonly recognized
American ethnic groups include American Indians, Latinos, Chinese, African Americans, European
Americans, etc.
In some cases, ethnicity involves merely a loose group identity with little or no cultural traditions in
common. This is the case with many Irish and German Americans. In contrast, some ethnic groups are
coherent subcultures with a shared language and body of tradition. Newly arrived immigrant groups often
fit this pattern.
Minority versus Ethnic Group
It is important not to confuse the term minority with ethnic group. Ethnic groups may be either a minority
or a majority in a population.
Whether a group is a minority or a majority also is not an absolute fact but depends on the perspective. For
instance, in some towns along the southern border of the U.S., people of Mexican ancestry are the
overwhelming majority population and control most of the important social and political institutions but are
still defined by state and national governments as a minority. In small homogenous societies, such as those
of hunters and gatherers and pastoralists, there is essentially only one ethnic group and no minorities.
Ethnic Categorizations
For many people, ethnic categorization implies a connection between biological inheritance and
culture. They believe that biological inheritance determines much of cultural identity. If this were true, for
instance, African American cultural traits, such as "black English", would stem from genetic inheritance.
This is not true. The pioneering 19th century English anthropologist E. B. Taylor was able to demonstrate
conclusively that biological race and culture is not the same thing.
It is clear that any one can be placed into another culture shortly after birth and can be thoroughly
encultured to that culture, regardless of their skin color, body shape, and other presumed racial features.
Race
A race is a biological subspecies, or variety of a species, consisting of a more or less distinct population with
anatomical traits that distinguish it clearly from other races.
This biologist's definition does not fit the reality of human genetic variation today. We are biologically an
extremely homogenous species. All humans today are 99.9% genetically identical, and most of the variation
that does occur is in the difference between males and females and our unique personal traits. This
homogeneity is very unusual in the animal kingdom. Even our closest relatives, the chimpanzees have 2-3
times more genetic variation than people. Orangutans have 8-10 times more variation.
It is now clear that our human "races" are cultural creations, not biological realities. The concept of human
biological races is based on the false assumption that anatomical traits, such as skin color and specific facial
characteristics, cluster together in single distinct groups of people. They do not. There are no clearly
distinct "black", "white", or other races.
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Introduction to Cultural Anthropology ­ SOC401
VU
Similarity in Human Adaptations
The popularly held view of human races ignores the fact that anatomical traits supposedly identifying a
particular race are often found extensively in other populations as well. This is due to the fact that similar
natural selection factors in different parts of the world often result in the evolution of similar adaptations.
For instance, intense sunlight in tropical latitudes has selected for darker skin color as a protection from
intense ultraviolet radiation. As a result, the dark brown skin color characteristic of sub-Saharan Africa is
also found among unrelated populations in the Indian subcontinent, Australia, New Guinea, and elsewhere
in the Southwest Pacific.
Safeguarding Against Cultural Biases
We must not let our own cultural biases get in the way of understanding the lives of other people.
Avoiding cultural biases is a very difficult task given the emotionally charged feelings and deep beliefs that
we have concerning race and ethnicity. However, suspending these attitudinal barriers in order to gain a
better understanding of the phenomena is well worth the effort.
Suggested Readings
Students are advised to read the following chapters to develop a better understanding of the various
principals highlighted in this hand-out:
Chapter 13 in `Cultural Anthropology: An Applied Perspective' by Ferrarro
Internet Resources
In addition to reading from the textbook, please visit the following web-site for this lecture, which provide
useful and interesting information:
Ethnicity and Race: An Introduction to the Nature of Social Group Differentiation and Inequality
http://anthro.palomar.edu/ethnicity/default.htm
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Table of Contents:
  1. WHAT IS ANTHROPOLOGY?:Cultural Anthropology, Internet Resources
  2. THE CONCEPT OF CULTURE AND THE APPLICATION OF CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY
  3. MAJOR THEORIES IN CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY:Diffusionism
  4. GROWTH OF ANTHROPOLOGICAL THEORY (continued):Post Modernism
  5. METHODS IN CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY:Comments on Fieldwork
  6. METHODS IN CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY (continued):Census Taking
  7. COMPARATIVE STUDY OF PRODUCTION, DISTRIBUTION AND CONSUMPTION IN DIFFERENT PARTS OF THE WORLD
  8. ECONOMIC ANTHROPOLOGY (continued):THE DISTRIBUTION OF GOODS AND SERVICES
  9. FOCUSING ON LANGUAGE:Languages of the World, Structure of Language
  10. FOCUS ON LANGUAGE (continued):Levels of Complexity, Cultural Emphasis
  11. OBTAINING FOOD IN DIFFERENT CULTURES:Optimal Foraging, Suggested Readings
  12. FOOD AND CULTURE (continued):Food Collectors, Food Production
  13. OBTAINING FOOD IN DIFFERENT CULTURE (continued):Pastoralism, Agriculture
  14. RELEVANCE OF KINSHIP AND DESCENT:Kinship Criteria, Rules of Descent
  15. KINSHIP AND DESCENT (continued):Tracing Descent, Primary Kinship Systems
  16. THE ROLE OF FAMILY AND MARRIAGE IN CULTURE:Economic Aspect of Marriage
  17. ROLE OF FAMILY AND MARRIAGE IN CULTURE (continued):Family Structures
  18. GENDER AND CULTURE:Gender Stratification, Suggested Readings
  19. GENDER ROLES IN CULTURE (continued):Women Employment, Feminization of Poverty
  20. STRATIFICATION AND CULTURE:Social Ranking, Dimensions of Inequality
  21. THEORIES OF STRATIFICATION (continued):The Functionalists, Conflict Theorists
  22. CULTURE AND CHANGE:Inventions, Diffusion, Donor, Conventional
  23. CULTURE AND CHANGE (continued):Cultural Interrelations, Reaction to Change
  24. CULTURE AND CHANGE (continued):Planned Change, Globalization
  25. POLITICAL ORGANIZATION:Bands, Tribal Organizations, Chiefdoms
  26. POLITICAL ORGANIZATION (continued):State Systems, Nation-States
  27. POLITICAL ORGANIZATION (continued):Social Norms, Informal Mechanisms
  28. PSYCHOLOGY AND CULTURE:Emotional Development, Psychological Universals
  29. PSYCHOLOGY AND CULTURE (continued):Origin of Customs, Personality Types
  30. IDEOLOGY AND CULTURE:Ideology in Everyday Life, Hegemony
  31. IDEOLOGY AND CULTURE (Continued):Political ideologies, Economic Ideology
  32. ASSOCIATIONS, CULTURES AND SOCIETIES:Variation in Associations, Age Sets
  33. ASSOCIATIONS, CULTURES AND SOCIETIES (continued):Formation of Associations
  34. RACE, ETHNICITY AND CULTURE:Similarity in Human Adaptations
  35. RACE, ETHNICITY AND CULTURE (continued):Inter-group Relations
  36. CULTURE AND BELIEFS:Social Function of Religion, Politics and Beliefs
  37. LOCAL OR INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE:Changing Definitions of Local Knowledge
  38. LOCAL OR INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE (continued):The Need for Caution
  39. ANTHROPOLOGY AND DEVELOPMENT:Influence of Development Notions
  40. ANTHROPOLOGY AND DEVELOPMENT (Continued):Contentions in Development
  41. ANTHROPOLOGY AND DEVELOPMENT (Continued):Operational
  42. CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY AND ART:Relevance of Art, Art and Politics
  43. CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY AND ART (continued):Art as a Status Symbol
  44. ETHICS IN ANTHROPOLOGY:Ethical Condemnation, Orientalism
  45. RELEVANCE OF CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY:Ensuring Cultural Survival