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Racism, history, and politics
Fundamentally, all racism/s are a cultural manifestation, a reflection or expression of tensions or problems within a society, rather than a phenomenon derived from an autonomous and somehow âobjectiveâ sphere of scientific investigation and theory.
(MacMaster 2001: 7)
Racism is a political phenomenon rather than a mere set of ideas. To analyze racism we must go beyond the texts of the racial âscientistsâ and philosophers. Instead we must look at how certain political conditions during particular historical contexts led to some of the ideas proposed by racial theorists being integrated into the political practices of nation-states. This chapter focuses on racism as both a political idea and a practice with effects on policy. Racism is taken to be a modern phenomenon and inherently a Western one. These three aspects â the political nature of racism, its modernity, and its grounding in the history of the West â are fundamental to understanding racismâs continuing hold over contemporary Western societies.
Revealing the political foundations of racism is particularly important today. The end of the era of decolonization, of Jim Crow and of apartheid in South Africa, and the establishment of immigration societies across most of the West has led to the shattering of many of the taboos that surrounded racism. Cultural relativism, once an anti-racist tool of the well-meaning left wing, has been turned on its head. Cultural relativists aimed to show that non-European peoples were equal but different to Europeans and that their supposed lack of progress was merely due to the historical âchanceâ, as the anthropologist Claude LĂ©vi-Strauss (1975) put it, that the industrial revolution took place in the West. Today, non-Europeans are portrayed as being equally able to exert force as Europeans. Indeed, they are commonly envisioned as posing a greater threat because, while they have the capacity to damage the West, they are said not to have the level of civility to evaluate the consequences of their actions.
It is common to suggest, therefore, that talk about racism has become redundant. The idea that society is âbeyond racismâ has important bearings on the way history is told and taught. For example, it has become acceptable to discuss the history of colonialism in a positive light in a way that would not have been possible in recent times. What does this mean for the way in which racism and the various forms it has taken â colonialism, slavery, genocide, and discrimination â is interpreted, taught, and publicly debated?
The popularity of revisionist readings of the history of colonialism and slavery, for example, is not unrelated to the tendency to brush racism under the carpet. For example, historians such as the Harvard Professor Niall Ferguson, whose television series, Empire: How Britain made the modern world, which presents an historically revisionist account of the positive effects the British Empire had on the lands it colonized, have become bestsellers. The Prime Minister of India, Manmohan Singh, in his address on receiving an honorary doctorate from Oxford University in July 2005, encapsulates this positive reassessment of colonial history:
Today, with the balance and perspective offered by the passage of time and the benefit of hindsight, it is possible for an Indian Prime Minister to assert that Indiaâs experience with Britain had its beneficial consequences too. Our notions of the rule of law, of a Constitutional government, of a free press, of a professional civil service, of modern universities and research laboratories have all been fashioned in the crucible where an age old civilisation met the dominant Empire of the day.
The growing acceptability of the revisionist approach to colonial history and its influence on policymaking, particularly in education, makes it all the more important to insist on an historicized, political approach to the analysis of racism. When the analysis of racism as an individual attitude, rather than a political idea, is coupled with the drive to frame colonialism in a positive light and blame the problems encountered in diverse societies on the cultural incompatibility of immigrants and their âunhelpfulâ victimization on the grounds of racism, it becomes even more pressing to analyze racism from a political point of view.
Racism and modernity
In Race: The History of an Idea in the West, Ivan Hannaford examines race and racism from antiquity to the twentieth century. He takes a firm stance against the idea that race (namely, fixed biological differences between human groups) has any serious bearing in philosophical, scientific, historical, or philological terms. He calls for us ânot to accept that the history of Western thought has always been, and will always be, a history of racial thoughtâ (1996: 4). By going so far back in his analysis, Hannaford lends weight to the thesis being put forward here that race really only comes into political being with the advent of modernity.
Hannaford bases his book on three further arguments:
1. The word race as used in Western languages is first found as late as the period 1200â1500. Only in the seventeenth century did it take on a separate meaning from the Latin word gens, or clan, and was related to the concept âethnic groupâ. âIn other wordsâ, Hannaford insists, âthe dispositions and presuppositions of race and ethnicity were introduced â some would say âinventedâ or âfabricatedâ â in modern times . . .â (ibid. 6) and, in any case, were not given the meaning they have today until after the French and American revolutions.
2. The reason why the notion of race became such a powerful and attractive idea is due to the âdeliberate manipulationâ of texts by scientists and historians to show that a racial order has always structured humanity. This manipulation is part of the classical tendency to see political processes as the main means of understanding society and the introduction instead of biologized or naturalized accounts of human relations.
3. The idea of race is not proper to Western civilization from a longitudinal historical perspective. Rather it emerges with the Enlightenment as a means of explaining the complexities of modes of human organization such as castes or tribes. However, in Hannafordâs view, this explanation is built on a history that has nothing whatsoever to do with race. In other words, race cannot explain the historical evolution of ethnic groups, tribes, or castes.
Hannaford insists that race is both modern and inextricable from politics. There is significant argument about when to date the period known as modernity. For some scholars it is the post-medieval period, from the 1400s and the invention of the printing press; for others it is as late as the period following 1860. I have taken modernity to date back to the Age of Enlightenment, thus, broadly, the eighteenth century: a period of great political transformation made possible by the French revolution, the origins of nation-states as we know them today, and the beginnings of technological and scientific âadvancementâ. How does identifying the emergence of racism with the development of Enlightenment thought help us to understand the modernity of racism?
Hannaford divides the period over which the idea of race develops into three stages: 1684â1815, 1815â70, and 1870â1914. This final period is known as the âGolden Ageâ of racism, a time when it was possible for the British Prime Minister of the time, Benjamin Disraeli, to proclaim: âRace is all. There is no other truth.â
The word race is first used in its modern sense in 1684 when François Bernier published his âNouvelle division de la terre par les diffĂ©rents espĂšces ou races qui lâhabitentâ. In Bernierâs essay, race stands for divisions among humans based on observable physical differences. At this stage, race is used as a simple descriptor and there is no intention of superiority or inferiority meant by presenting humanity in this way. Nonetheless, dividing humanity up in the manner proposed by Bernier would have been impossible only years earlier. Radical changes in methodology at this time made it possible to speak about humanity being divided into proposed âracesâ. It is this methodological shift in the way Western scholars started to think about what it means to be human that fundamentally changed the way we think about the origins of human life, the universe, and society. It is the basis for the way we think about these things to this day.
The most significant change was in the fact that theological and metaphysical explanations about life and the universe were replaced by a âmore logical description and classifications that ordered humankind in terms of physiological and mental criteria based on observable âfactsâ and tested evidenceâ (Hannaford, 1996: 187). Philosophers like RenĂ© Descartes, Thomas Hobbes, and John Locke, who are largely synonymous with the evolution of Enlightenment thought, along with others such as Immanuel Kant, were responsible for these important changes. The rational thought, based on observable evidence, that these thinkers initiated made it possible for things to be divided and classified systematically. This ordering procedure could be applied to everything, living or not, but where it took on the greatest importance was in reference to humans.
Based on the newly discovered possibility of thinking about the development of humanity in rational terms, several scholars â most influentially Johann Friedrich Blumenbach (1752â1840) â began to question the classical (Aristotelian) political tradition. Politics at the time of the Enlightenment challenged the absolute sovereignty of a monarch over his or her people. The French revolution eventually proved that kings did not have a divine right to rule. These challenges led to questions about where the legitimacy for rule did come from. Several scholars, using new methods of classification that saw human beings within a general scheme of things that included all species, posited the natural origins of contemporary politics as an alternative to the Greco-Roman roots subscribed to by Europeans until this stage. The growing influence of the study of natural history by the mid eighteenth century, while as yet unable to refute completely either the Bible or the classical tradition, sowed the seeds for alternative accounts of the origins of humankind (e.g. evolution), no longer traced uniquely back to Jerusalem, Greece, and Rome.
MacMaster has made it clear that, at the time of Enlightenment, racial divisions cannot be seen as having the same pernicious connotations associated with the racism of later years. Nevertheless, it is important to look back to this time in order to understand the influence of Enlightenment thought on the evolution of full-scale modern racism.
The rational ordering and classification of people into biologically determined groups made possible by advances in thought at this time, and the nascent challenges to traditional interpretations of the origins of humankind based on classical and biblical accounts were fundamental to the eruption of racism by the late eighteenth century. However, racism â an inherently political phenomenon â could not take root in the absence of favorable political conditions that the rise of nationalism and anti-Enlightenment thinking brought about.
MacMaster shows that ideas about racial differences between human groups that were developed during the Age of Enlightenment actually upheld the thesis of monogenesis: the idea that all human beings are descended from one original group. What he calls âhumanitarian racismâ can be distinguished from the racism that emerges following 1870, in that it remains faithful both to the biblical notion of Creation and to Enlightenment ideals of the brotherhood of man. At this time, physical anthropologists, such as Blumenbach, who based their work on the accounts of âtravel writersâ (missionaries, soldiers, or so-called explorers), saw all races as the descendents of one ancestral group. This group was believed to be white-skinned. Non-white races were understood to have âdegeneratedâ over time due to climate, disease, and way of life.
Around the time of the 1789 French revolution, Enlightenment principles of equality encouraged the gradual abolition of slavery and the emancipation of European Jewry by the mid nineteenth century. This movement was seen as being entirely compatible with developments in the classification of races. The task of the European or white race, as direct descendents of the ancestors of all races, and, as it was believed, the natural rulers over the earth, was to ensure the spread of human progress. The âcivilizing missionâ was seen as being the responsibility of the Europeans towards the âprimitive peoplesâ. Although the racism of the Enlightenment has been seen as less harmful than the exclusionary and violent racism that followed it, its effects, particularly in the colonies, were just as damaging. It is in fact the seemingly paradoxical meeting of Enlightenment principles of humanism with reactionary nationalism that creates the conditions for racism to develop both in Europe and in the colonized world.
No science without politics
The German philosopher Eric Voegelin wrote two volumes on race which he published in 1933 after fleeing Nazi Germany. Voegelin was interested in race as being one of the main ideas structuring a theory of state. He believed that understanding race helps us to understand the nature of the state and politics. Voegelin wrote at a time when racism in Europe was coming to full political fruition with the rise of the Nazis to power. Since Voegelin, few authors have seen race as so fundamental to an understanding of politics, a fact which has led to racism being treated as marginal to state processes. What Voegelin helps us to understand is that racial science would be of no concern were it not for its influence on the political realm in Europe over the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
Voegelin distinguishes between the concept and the idea of race. He sees the scientific concept of race as composed of a set of false notions with no actual basis in provable scientific fact. It is the race idea â a well-ordered system of political dogmas â that interests him. Voegelinâs approach demonstrates the importance of seeing the development of racial science from a political point of view. The pseudo-scientific notions that are now understood to be at the basis of racism could only have become as important as they did because they found resonance with political movements and agendas. Before turning to these agendas, in particular the ever closer relationship between racism and nationalism by the mid nineteenth century, let us take a closer look at the main developments in the ârace conceptâ from the Enlightenment to the Romantic period.
Hannaford (1996: 214) points out that race only came into its own when it âdeveloped a will to individual power based on a biology that distinguished superior and inferior racesâ. As we have seen, this was not the intention of the physical anthropologists of the Enlightenment such as Montesquieu or Blumenbach whose interest remained focused on thinking about humanity in terms of the laws of nature more generally. What steps had to be taken to move from a belief in monogenesis to one in polygenesis: the idea that different groups descended from various ancestral groups, an idea that radically diverges from the belief in Creation and the basic brotherhood of man?
The first step was that of racial determinism. The British anatomist Robert Knox, in his The Races of Men (1850), set out the notion of an absolute biological divide between races. Knox believed that the impermeability of each racial group made it impossible for races to mix. He saw all racial groups as unchanging over time, as was the hierarchical structure in which they were placed: the white European at the top, the ânegroâ at the bottom. The former was therefore destined to dominate the latter. MacMaster argues that the development of both racial determinism and polygenesis, as guiding concepts in the formulation of race theory, led to the emergence of racism. The idea that different human groups did not share the same ancestral lineage and were historically distinct from each other made it easier to believe in the destiny of white people to dominate âinferiorâ races. We can see how the development of racial science in this direction facilitates the marriage between science and politics: a belief in the inferiority of blacks legitimated their domination and extermination as a consequence of the expanding imperialist politics of the time.
These developments in racial science also led theorists to distinguish among European peoples, and not only between Europeans as a group â once seen as belonging to a single racial block â and non-European others. This racial sub-division of Europeans is central. It explains how race and nation come to be seen as synonymous and, therefore, how imperial competition and war between the European powers could be framed in racial terms. This âself-referentialâ racism also explains how, in the period between 1870 and 1914, preserving the strong race from degeneration became a primary political concern.
A growing number of scholars became interested in the theme of race. Key figures of the European philosophical corpus, including Immanuel Kant, David Hume, Edmund Burke, and Johann Gottfried Herder, wrote on race in different ways. But these thinkers cannot be called racial scientists. Self-proclaimed racial scientists such as Arthur de Gobineau, Francis Galton, or Georges Vacher de Lapouge, active towards the end of the nineteenth century, were rather more populist than the former group and were directly interested in influencing politics with their ideas. Racism endures politically because it borrows from a variety of discourses and justifications, chopping and changing between them according to context and time.
In order to demonstrate the growth of the union between racial science and the political sphere, the work of two theorists in particular should be considered. In quite different ways, the work of Count Arthur de Gobineau and Charles Darwin have become synonymous with the history of racial science of the nineteenth century. The work of these two personalities is explanatory because their contributions had a direct influence on the marriage between politics and racial science. For Gobineau, this was determined by his mission to alter the course of politics radically and steer the European states away from the dangers he associated with the greater equality brought about by Enlightenment. Darwinâs work is crucial mainly because of the way it was interpreted by the Social Darwinists as a system for justifying social engineering: eugenics.
Count Arthur de Gobineau (1816â82) was a French aristocrat whose contribution to racial science was based on his preoccupation with what he saw as the degeneration of Europe. He had an important influence on German racism at the turn of the twentieth century because of what his theory revealed about Europeans themselves: faced with unleashed hordes of emancipated Jews and working classes, the white race was in danger of deterioration from within. The basis of his theory of race was that no other factor â climate, geography, and so on â had any impact on the place of a nation in the echelon of civilization. And one race alone was at the origin of âeverything great, noble and fruitful in the works of man on this earthâ (1915: xv): the white race. These achievements belong âto one family alone, the different branches of which have reigned in all the civilized countries of the universeâ.
In 1854, Gobineau published his Essai sur lâinĂ©galitĂ© des races humaines. However, it was only ten years later, following the American Civil War and the Franco-Prussian War, that his ideas had any great influence. He sought to use race to explain the ills of the age, particularly the threat to aristocratic rule from working-class consciousness, the corruption of the Church, and what he saw as the spread of Semitic values. He blamed these ills on the degeneration of the European people. This had come about due to a âbastardizationâ of European civilization whose peopleâs blood was no longer pure,...