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Color terminology for race

Identifying human races in terms of skin colour, at least as one among several physiological characteristics, has been common since antiquity. Such divisions appeared in rabbinical literature and in early modern scholarship, usually dividing humankind into four or five categories, with colour-based labels: red, yellow, black, white, and sometimes brown.[1][failed verification] It was long recognized that the number of categories is arbitrary and subjective, and different ethnic groups were placed in different categories at different points in time. François Bernier (1684) doubted the validity of using skin color as a racial characteristic, and Charles Darwin (1871) emphasized the gradual differences between categories.[2] Today there is broad agreement among scientists that typological conceptions of race have no scientific basis.[3][4][5][6]

History edit

Antiquity to 1600s edit

Categorization of racial groups by reference to skin color is common in classical antiquity.[7] For example, it is found in e.g. Physiognomica, a Greek treatise dated to c. 300 BC.

The transmission of the "color terminology" for race from antiquity to early anthropology in 17th century Europe took place via rabbinical literature. Specifically, Pirke De-Rabbi Eliezer (a medieval rabbinical text dated roughly to between the 7th to 12th centuries) contains the division of mankind into three groups based on the three sons of Noah, viz. Shem, Ham and Japheth:

"He [Noah] especially blessed Shem and his sons, (making them) black but comely [שחורים ונאים], and he gave them the habitable earth. He blessed Ham and his sons, (making them) black like the raven [שחורים כעורב], and he gave them as an inheritance the coast of the sea. He blessed Japheth and his sons, (making) them entirely white [כלם לבני], and he gave them for an inheritance the desert and its fields" (trans. Gerald Friedlander 1916, p. 172f.)

This division in Rabbi Eliezer and other rabbinical texts is received by Georgius Hornius (1666). In Hornius' scheme, the Japhetites (identified as Scythians, an Iranic ethnic group and Celts) are "white" (albos), the Aethiopians and Chamae are "black" (nigros), and the Indians and Semites are "brownish-yellow" (flavos), while the Jews, following Mishnah Sanhedrin, are exempt from the classification being neither black nor white but "light brown" (buxus, the color of boxwood).[8]

François Bernier in a short article published anonymously in 1684 moves away from the "Noahide" classification, proposes to consider large subgroups of mankind based not on geographical distribution but on physiological differences. Writing in French, Bernier uses the term race, or synonymously espece "kind, species", where Hornius had used tribus "tribe" or populus "people". Bernier explicitly rejects a categorization based on skin color, arguing that the dark skin of Indians is due to exposure to the Sun only, and that the yellowish colour of some Asians, while a genuine feature, is not sufficient to establish a separate category. Instead his first category comprises most of Europe, the Near East and North Africa, including populations in the Nile Valley and the Indian peninsula he describes as being of a near "black" skin tone due to the effect of the sun. His second category includes most of Sub-Saharan Africa, again not exclusively based on skin colour but on physiological features such as the shape of nose and lips. His third category includes Southeast Asia, China and Japan as well as part of Tatarstan (Central Asia and eastern Muscovy). Members of this category are described as white, the categorization being based on facial features rather than skin colour. His fourth category are the Lapps (Lappons), described as a savage race with faces reminiscent of bears (but for which the author admits to rely on hearsay). Finally, the natives of the Americas are considered as a fifth category, described as of "olive" (olivastre) skin tone. The author furthermore considers the possible addition of more categories, specifically the "blacks of the Cape of Good Hope", which seemed to him to be of significantly different build from most other populations below the Sahara.[9]

 
1851 map of Johann Friedrich Blumenbach's five races, labeled "Caucasian or White", "Mongolian or Yellow", "Aethiopian or Black", "American or Red" and "Malayan or Brown".

Early Modern physical anthropology edit

In the 1730s, Carl Linnaeus in his introduction of systematic taxonomy recognized four main human subspecies, termed Americanus (Americans), Europaeus (Europeans), Asiaticus (Asians) and Afer (Africans). The physical appearance of each type is briefly described, including colour adjectives referring to skin and hair colour: rufus "red" and pilis nigris "black hair" for Americans, albus "white" and pilis flavescentibus "yellowish hair" for Europeans, luridus "yellowish, sallow", pilis nigricantibus "swarthy hair" for Asians, and niger "black", pilis atris "coal-black hair" for Africans.[10]

The views of Johann Friedrich Blumenbach on the categorization of the major races of mankind developed over the course of the 1770s to 1820s. He introduced a four-fold division in 1775, extended to five in 1779, later borne out in his work on craniology (Decas craniorum, published during 1790–1828). He also used color as the name or main label of the races but as part of the description of their physiology. Blumenbach does not name his five groups in 1779 but gives their geographic distribution. The color adjectives used in 1779 are weiss "white" (Caucasian race), gelbbraun "yellow-brown" (Mongolian race), schwarz "black" (Aethiopian race), kupferrot "copper-red" (American race) and schwarzbraun "black-brown" (Malayan race).[11] Blumenbach belonged to a group known as the Göttingen school of history, which helped to popularize his ideas.

Blumenbach's division and choice of color-adjectives remained influential throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries, with variation depending on author. René Lesson in 1847 presented a division into six groups based on simple color adjectives: White (Caucasian), Dusky (South Asian), Orange (Austronesian), Yellow (East Asian), Red (Indigenous American), Black (African).[12] According to Barkhaus (2006)[13] it was the adoption of both the colour terminology and the French term race by Immanuel Kant in 1775 which proved influential. Kant published an essay Von den verschiedenen Racen der Menschen "On the diverse races of mankind" in 1775, based on the system proposed by Buffon, Histoire Naturelle, in which he recognized four groups, a "white" European race (Race der Weißen), a "black" Negroid race (Negerrace), a copper-red Kalmyk race (kalmuckishe Race) and an olive-yellow Indian race (Hinduische Race).[14]

Two historical anthropologists favored a binary racial classification system that divided people into a light skin and dark skin categories. 18th-century anthropologist Christoph Meiners, who first defined the Caucasian race, posited a "binary racial scheme" of two races with the Caucasian whose racial purity was exemplified by the "venerated... ancient Germans", although he considered some Europeans as impure "dirty whites"; and "Mongolians", who consisted of everyone else.[15] Meiners did not include the Jews as Caucasians and ascribed them a "permanently degenerate nature".[16] Hannah Franzieka identified 19th-century writers who believed in the "Caucasian hypothesis" and noted that "Jean-Julien Virey and Louis Antoine Desmoulines were well-known supports of the idea that Europeans came from Mount Caucasus."[17] In his political history of racial identity, Bruce Baum wrote, "Jean-Joseph Virey (1774-1847), a follower of Chistoph Meiners, claimed that "the human races... may divided... into those who are fair and white and those who are dark or black."[18]

 
Stoddard's map of the distribution of the five primary races of the world (1920).

Lothrop Stoddard in The Rising Tide of Color Against White World-Supremacy (1920) considered five races: White, Black, Yellow, Brown, and Amerindian (Red). In this explicitly white supremacist exposition of racial categorization, the "white" category is much more limited than in Blumenbach's scheme, essentially restricted to Europeans, while the separate "brown" category is introduced for non-European Caucasoid subgroups in North Africa, Western, Central and South Asia.[19]

Racial categories after 1945 edit

 
The old flag of Suriname (1954–1975) symbolized unity between the five "races" in the country: red (Indigenous Americans), white (Europeans), black (Africans), brown (South Asians and Javanese) and yellow (East Asians).

Following World War II, more and more biologists and anthropologists began to discontinue use of the term "race" due to its association with political ideologies of racism. Thus, The Race Question statement by the UNESCO, in the 1950s, proposed to substitute the term "ethnic groups" to the concept of "race". Categories such as Europid, Mongoloid, Negroid, Australoid remain in use in fields such as forensic anthropology.[20]

Color terminology remains in use in some countries with multiracial populations for the purpose of their official census, as in the United States, where the official categories are "Black", "White", "Asian", "Native American and Alaska Natives" and "Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders" and in the United Kingdom (since 1991) with official categories "White", "Asian" and "Black".[21] Conversely, it is uncommon in English speaking countries to use "Yellow" to refer to Asian people or "Red" to refer to Indigenous peoples of the Americas. This is due to historic negative associations of the terms (ex. Yellow Peril and Redskin).[22][23] However, some Asians have tried to reclaim the word by proudly self-identifying as "Yellow".[24][25] Similarly, some Native Americans have tried to reclaim the term "Red".[26]

Much of the color-based classification relates to groups that were politically significant at different points in US history (e.g., part of a wave of immigrants), and these categories do not have an obvious label for people from other groups, such as people from the Middle East or Central Asia.[1] However, many Middle Eastern and South Asian people in the Anglophone world self-identify as "Brown", considering their skin color central to their identity.[27][28] Many Hispanics, particularly mestizos, have self-identified as the Bronze race (la raza de bronce) since the 20th century.[29] The term "Olive" has sometimes been used to refer variously to Mediterranean, South Asian, Latin American, and Pacific Islander people.[30][31]

Symbolism and uses of color terminology edit

The Martinique-born French Frantz Fanon and African-American writers Langston Hughes, Maya Angelou, and Ralph Ellison, among others, wrote that negative symbolisms surrounding the word "black" outnumber positive ones. They argued that the good vs. bad dualism associated with white and black unconsciously frame prejudiced colloquialisms. In the 1970s the term black replaced Negro in the United States.[32]

Tone gradations edit

In some societies people can be sensitive to gradations of skin tone, which may be due to miscegenation or to albinism and which can affect power and prestige. In 1930s Harlem slang, such gradations were described by a tonescale of "high yaller (yellow), yaller, high brown, vaseline brown, seal brown, low brown, dark brown".[33] These terms were sometimes referred to in blues music, both in the words of songs and in the names of performers. In 1920s Georgia, Willie Perryman followed his older brother Rufus in becoming a blues piano player: both were albino Negroes with pale skin, reddish hair and poor eyesight. Rufus was already well established as "Speckled Red", Willie became "Piano Red".[34] The piano player and guitarist Tampa Red from the same state developed his career in Chicago at that time: his name may have come from his light skin tone, or possibly reddish hair.

More recently such categorization has been noted in the Caribbean. It is reported that skin tones play an important role in defining how Barbadians view one another, and they use terms such as "brown skin, light skin, fair skin, high brown, red, and mulatto".[35] An assessment of racism in Trinidad notes people often being described by their skin tone, with the gradations being "HIGH RED – part White, part Black but 'clearer' than Brown-skin: HIGH BROWN – More white than Black, light skinned: DOUGLA – part Indian and part Black: LIGHT SKINNED, or CLEAR SKINNED Some Black, but more White: TRINI WHITE – Perhaps not all White, behaves like others but skin White".[36] In Jamaica, albinism has been stigmatized, but the albino dancehall singer Yellowman took his stage name in protest against such prejudice and has helped to end this stereotype.

United States edit

Racial segregation in the United States was based on a binary classification, white vs. non-white, in which "white" was held to imply "purity" so that anyone with even the slightest amount of non-white ancestry was excluded from white privileges, and there could be no category of racially mixed people. In 1896 this doctrine was upheld in the Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme Court case. Traditionally the main distinction was between "white" and "black", but Japanese Americans could be accepted on both sides of the divide. As further racial groups were categorized, "white" became narrowly construed, and everyone else was categorised as a "person of color", suggesting that "white" people have no race, while racial subdivision of those "of color" was unimportant.[37]

At college campus protests during the 1960s, a "Flag of the Races" was in use, with five stripes comprising red, black, brown, yellow, and white tones.[38][unreliable source?]

In the 2000 United States Census, two of the five self-designated races are labeled by a color.[21] In the 2000 US Census, "White" refers to "person having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or North Africa."[21] In the 2000 US Census, "Black or African American" refers to a "person having origins in any of the Black racial groups of Africa."[21]

The other three self-designated races are not labeled by color.[21] This is due to historic negative associations of terms like "Yellow" (for East Asians) and "Red" (for Native Americans) with racism.[22][23] However, some Asian Americans and Native Americans have tried to reclaim these color terms by self-identifying as "Yellow" and "Red", respectively.[24][26]

Though not an official color or racial designation in the United States census, "Brown" has been used to describe certain peoples such as Arab Americans and Indian Americans.[27][28][39] Many Middle Eastern Americans have criticized the United States Census for denying them a racial designation, as they are classified as "White" by the United States census.[27] Furthermore, though Asian as a racial term in the United States groups together ethnically diverse Asian peoples such as the Chinese, Indians, Filipinos and Japanese, its common usage has been criticized for only referring to East Asians. This has led some South and Southeast Asian Americans to use the term "Brown Asian" to separate themselves from East Asian Americans.[28]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Oliver, Pamela Elaine (2017-11-11). "Race Names". doi:10.31235/osf.io/7wys2. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. ^ The Descent of Man p225,
  3. ^ Race Is Real, but not in the way Many People Think, Agustín Fuentes, Psychology Today.com, 9 April 2012
  4. ^ The Royal Institution - panel discussion - What Science Tells us about Race and Racism. 16 March 2016. Archived from the original on 2021-12-13.
  5. ^ Jorde, Lynn B.; Wooding, Stephen P. (2004). "Genetic variation, classification and 'race'". Nature. 36 (11 Suppl): S28–S33. doi:10.1038/ng1435. PMID 15508000. S2CID 15251775. Ancestry, then, is a more subtle and complex description of an individual's genetic makeup than is race. This is in part a consequence of the continual mixing and migration of human populations throughout history. Because of this complex and interwoven history, many loci must be examined to derive even an approximate portrayal of individual ancestry.
  6. ^ Michael White. "Why Your Race Isn't Genetic". Pacific Standard. Retrieved 13 December 2014. [O]ngoing contacts, plus the fact that we were a small, genetically homogeneous species to begin with, has resulted in relatively close genetic relationships, despite our worldwide presence. The DNA differences between humans increase with geographical distance, but boundaries between populations are, as geneticists Kenneth Weiss and Jeffrey Long put it, "multilayered, porous, ephemeral, and difficult to identify." Pure, geographically separated ancestral populations are an abstraction: "There is no reason to think that there ever were isolated, homogeneous parental populations at any time in our human past."
  7. ^ "Among the Greeks and Romans who have provided the fullest description of blacks, the Africans' color was regarded as their most characteristic and most unusual feature. In this respect the ancients were not unlike whites of later generations who used color terms as a kind of shorthand to denote Africans and those of African descent." Frank M. Snowden, Before Color Prejudice: The Ancient View of Blacks, Harvard University Press, 1991, p. 7.
  8. ^ Arca Noae, sive historia imperiorum et regnorum ̀condito orbe ad nostra tempora. Officina Hackiana, Leiden 1666, p. 37. Alias pro colorum diversitate commode quoque distinxeris posteros Noachi in albos, qui sunt Scythae & Japhetaei, nigros, qui sunt Aethiopes & Chamae, flavos, qui sunt Indi & Semaei. Ita Iudaei in Glossea Misnae tractatu Sanhedrin. fol. 18. dicuntur ut buxus, nec nigri nec albi, quales fere sunt omnes a Semo orti.
  9. ^ Anonymous [F. Bernier], "Nouvelle division de la terre par les différentes espèces ou races qui l'habitent", Journal des Sçavants, 24 April 1684, p. 133–140. See also Charles Frankel, La science face au racisme (1986), 41f.
  10. ^ Linnaeus, Syst. Nat. ed. 10 Vol. 1. p. 21.
  11. ^ Blumenbach, Johann Friedrich (1779). Handbuch der Naturgeschichte. p. 63.
  12. ^ Smith, Charles Hamilton; Kneeland, Samuel (1851). The Natural History of the Human Species. Gould and Lincoln.
  13. ^ A. Barkhaus, "Rassen" in: Hansjörg Bay, Kai Merten (eds.) Die Ordnung der Kulturen: zur Konstruktion ethnischer, nationaler und zivilisatorischer Differenzen 1750-1850 (2006), p. 39–44.
  14. ^ Kant (1775:432), cited after Barkhaus (2006:44).
  15. ^ Painter, Nell Irvin. Yale University. "Why White People are Called Caucasian?" 2003. September 27, 2007. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-10-20. Retrieved 2014-05-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link); Keevak, Michael. Becoming Yellow: A Short History of Racial Thinking. Princeton University Press, 2011. ISBN 0-6911-4031-6.
  16. ^ Eigen, Sara. The German Invention of Race. Suny Press:New York, 2006. ISBN 0-7914-6677-9 p.205
  17. ^ Franzieka, Hannah. Berghahn Books: 2004. ISBN 1-57181-857-X James Cowles Prichard's Anthropology: Remaking the Science of Man in Early
  18. ^ Baum, Bruce David. The Rise and Fall of the Caucasian Race: A Political History of Racial Identity. New York University: 2006. ISBN 0-8147-9892-6
  19. ^ Stoddard, Lothrop (1920). The Rising Tide of Color Against White World-Supremacy. United States: Charles Scribner's Sons. ISBN 4-87187-849-X.
  20. ^ Adams, Bradley J. (2007). Forensic Anthropology. USA: Chelsea House. Page 44. ISBN 978-0-7910-9198-2 Retrieved June 12, 2017, from link.
  21. ^ a b c d e US Census Bureau. Race. 2000. Accessed July 14, 2008 August 31, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ a b Yang, Tim (19 February 2004). "The Malleable Yet Undying Nature of the Yellow Peril". Dartmouth College. from the original on 2 January 2015.
  23. ^ a b . Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on September 16, 2016.
  24. ^ a b Wong, Joan (December 21, 2018). "'Beautiful and empowering': Was 2018 the year Asian Americans took 'yellow' back?". NBC News.
  25. ^ Kat Chow (September 27, 2018). "If We Called Ourselves Yellow". NPR (Podcast). Event occurs at 6:25 AM.
  26. ^ a b Ross, Gyasi (2013-10-16). ""Redskins": A Native's Guide To Debating An Inglorious Word". Deadspin. from the original on 2014-11-12.
  27. ^ a b c Bayoumi, Moustafa (14 February 2019). "I'm a brown Arab-American, and the US census refuses to recognize me". The Guardian.
  28. ^ a b c Schiavenza, Matt (October 19, 2016). "Why Some 'Brown Asians' Feel Left Out of the Asian American Conversation". Asia Society.
  29. ^ Nervo, Amado (1902). La Raza de Bronce.
  30. ^ "Olive Skin Countries 2023". World Population Review. 2023.
  31. ^ Gates, Clifford E. (1922). "The Polynesians: Caucasians of the Pacific". The Scientific Monthly. 15 (3): 257–262.
  32. ^ Black, black, or African American? 2009-04-13 at the Wayback Machine, Aly Colón
  33. ^ Zora Neale Hurston's - Glossary of Harlem Slang "Tonescale"
  34. ^ The Blues Collection issue 68, Piano Red, Contribution by Tony Russell, 1996
  35. ^ Barbados - Post Report - eDiplomat
  36. ^ RACISM IN TRINIDAD (pdf)
  37. ^ Zack, Naomi (1995). American Mixed Race: The Culture of Microdiversity. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 53–56. ISBN 978-0-8476-8013-9.
  38. ^ . Carleton College. Archived from the original on 2008-09-07. Retrieved 2018-03-17.
  39. ^ Kulkarni, Saili S. (April 24, 2021). "South Asians Are Asians Too. When Will Our Racial Reckoning Be?". Ms. Retrieved March 24, 2022. yet we didn't similarly rally for the Brown, South Asians killed in Indianapolis.

color, terminology, race, this, article, about, arbitrary, divisions, humanity, skin, color, anthropological, concept, race, race, human, categorization, identifying, human, races, terms, skin, colour, least, among, several, physiological, characteristics, bee. This article is about arbitrary divisions of humanity by skin color For the anthropological concept of race see Race human categorization Identifying human races in terms of skin colour at least as one among several physiological characteristics has been common since antiquity Such divisions appeared in rabbinical literature and in early modern scholarship usually dividing humankind into four or five categories with colour based labels red yellow black white and sometimes brown 1 failed verification It was long recognized that the number of categories is arbitrary and subjective and different ethnic groups were placed in different categories at different points in time Francois Bernier 1684 doubted the validity of using skin color as a racial characteristic and Charles Darwin 1871 emphasized the gradual differences between categories 2 Today there is broad agreement among scientists that typological conceptions of race have no scientific basis 3 4 5 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Antiquity to 1600s 1 2 Early Modern physical anthropology 1 3 Racial categories after 1945 2 Symbolism and uses of color terminology 2 1 Tone gradations 2 2 United States 3 See also 4 ReferencesHistory editFurther information Historical race concepts Physical anthropology and Scientific racism Antiquity to 1600s edit Categorization of racial groups by reference to skin color is common in classical antiquity 7 For example it is found in e g Physiognomica a Greek treatise dated to c 300 BC The transmission of the color terminology for race from antiquity to early anthropology in 17th century Europe took place via rabbinical literature Specifically Pirke De Rabbi Eliezer a medieval rabbinical text dated roughly to between the 7th to 12th centuries contains the division of mankind into three groups based on the three sons of Noah viz Shem Ham and Japheth He Noah especially blessed Shem and his sons making them black but comely שחורים ונאים and he gave them the habitable earth He blessed Ham and his sons making them black like the raven שחורים כעורב and he gave them as an inheritance the coast of the sea He blessed Japheth and his sons making them entirely white כלם לבני and he gave them for an inheritance the desert and its fields trans Gerald Friedlander 1916 p 172f This division in Rabbi Eliezer and other rabbinical texts is received by Georgius Hornius 1666 In Hornius scheme the Japhetites identified as Scythians an Iranic ethnic group and Celts are white albos the Aethiopians and Chamae are black nigros and the Indians and Semites are brownish yellow flavos while the Jews following Mishnah Sanhedrin are exempt from the classification being neither black nor white but light brown buxus the color of boxwood 8 Francois Bernier in a short article published anonymously in 1684 moves away from the Noahide classification proposes to consider large subgroups of mankind based not on geographical distribution but on physiological differences Writing in French Bernier uses the term race or synonymously espece kind species where Hornius had used tribus tribe or populus people Bernier explicitly rejects a categorization based on skin color arguing that the dark skin of Indians is due to exposure to the Sun only and that the yellowish colour of some Asians while a genuine feature is not sufficient to establish a separate category Instead his first category comprises most of Europe the Near East and North Africa including populations in the Nile Valley and the Indian peninsula he describes as being of a near black skin tone due to the effect of the sun His second category includes most of Sub Saharan Africa again not exclusively based on skin colour but on physiological features such as the shape of nose and lips His third category includes Southeast Asia China and Japan as well as part of Tatarstan Central Asia and eastern Muscovy Members of this category are described as white the categorization being based on facial features rather than skin colour His fourth category are the Lapps Lappons described as a savage race with faces reminiscent of bears but for which the author admits to rely on hearsay Finally the natives of the Americas are considered as a fifth category described as of olive olivastre skin tone The author furthermore considers the possible addition of more categories specifically the blacks of the Cape of Good Hope which seemed to him to be of significantly different build from most other populations below the Sahara 9 nbsp 1851 map of Johann Friedrich Blumenbach s five races labeled Caucasian or White Mongolian or Yellow Aethiopian or Black American or Red and Malayan or Brown Early Modern physical anthropology edit In the 1730s Carl Linnaeus in his introduction of systematic taxonomy recognized four main human subspecies termed Americanus Americans Europaeus Europeans Asiaticus Asians and Afer Africans The physical appearance of each type is briefly described including colour adjectives referring to skin and hair colour rufus red and pilis nigris black hair for Americans albus white and pilis flavescentibus yellowish hair for Europeans luridus yellowish sallow pilis nigricantibus swarthy hair for Asians and niger black pilis atris coal black hair for Africans 10 The views of Johann Friedrich Blumenbach on the categorization of the major races of mankind developed over the course of the 1770s to 1820s He introduced a four fold division in 1775 extended to five in 1779 later borne out in his work on craniology Decas craniorum published during 1790 1828 He also used color as the name or main label of the races but as part of the description of their physiology Blumenbach does not name his five groups in 1779 but gives their geographic distribution The color adjectives used in 1779 are weiss white Caucasian race gelbbraun yellow brown Mongolian race schwarz black Aethiopian race kupferrot copper red American race and schwarzbraun black brown Malayan race 11 Blumenbach belonged to a group known as the Gottingen school of history which helped to popularize his ideas Blumenbach s division and choice of color adjectives remained influential throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries with variation depending on author Rene Lesson in 1847 presented a division into six groups based on simple color adjectives White Caucasian Dusky South Asian Orange Austronesian Yellow East Asian Red Indigenous American Black African 12 According to Barkhaus 2006 13 it was the adoption of both the colour terminology and the French term race by Immanuel Kant in 1775 which proved influential Kant published an essay Von den verschiedenen Racen der Menschen On the diverse races of mankind in 1775 based on the system proposed by Buffon Histoire Naturelle in which he recognized four groups a white European race Race der Weissen a black Negroid race Negerrace a copper red Kalmyk race kalmuckishe Race and an olive yellow Indian race Hinduische Race 14 Two historical anthropologists favored a binary racial classification system that divided people into a light skin and dark skin categories 18th century anthropologist Christoph Meiners who first defined the Caucasian race posited a binary racial scheme of two races with the Caucasian whose racial purity was exemplified by the venerated ancient Germans although he considered some Europeans as impure dirty whites and Mongolians who consisted of everyone else 15 Meiners did not include the Jews as Caucasians and ascribed them a permanently degenerate nature 16 Hannah Franzieka identified 19th century writers who believed in the Caucasian hypothesis and noted that Jean Julien Virey and Louis Antoine Desmoulines were well known supports of the idea that Europeans came from Mount Caucasus 17 In his political history of racial identity Bruce Baum wrote Jean Joseph Virey 1774 1847 a follower of Chistoph Meiners claimed that the human races may divided into those who are fair and white and those who are dark or black 18 nbsp Stoddard s map of the distribution of the five primary races of the world 1920 Lothrop Stoddard in The Rising Tide of Color Against White World Supremacy 1920 considered five races White Black Yellow Brown and Amerindian Red In this explicitly white supremacist exposition of racial categorization the white category is much more limited than in Blumenbach s scheme essentially restricted to Europeans while the separate brown category is introduced for non European Caucasoid subgroups in North Africa Western Central and South Asia 19 Racial categories after 1945 edit nbsp The old flag of Suriname 1954 1975 symbolized unity between the five races in the country red Indigenous Americans white Europeans black Africans brown South Asians and Javanese and yellow East Asians Following World War II more and more biologists and anthropologists began to discontinue use of the term race due to its association with political ideologies of racism Thus The Race Question statement by the UNESCO in the 1950s proposed to substitute the term ethnic groups to the concept of race Categories such as Europid Mongoloid Negroid Australoid remain in use in fields such as forensic anthropology 20 Color terminology remains in use in some countries with multiracial populations for the purpose of their official census as in the United States where the official categories are Black White Asian Native American and Alaska Natives and Native Hawaiians and Other Pacific Islanders and in the United Kingdom since 1991 with official categories White Asian and Black 21 Conversely it is uncommon in English speaking countries to use Yellow to refer to Asian people or Red to refer to Indigenous peoples of the Americas This is due to historic negative associations of the terms ex Yellow Peril and Redskin 22 23 However some Asians have tried to reclaim the word by proudly self identifying as Yellow 24 25 Similarly some Native Americans have tried to reclaim the term Red 26 Much of the color based classification relates to groups that were politically significant at different points in US history e g part of a wave of immigrants and these categories do not have an obvious label for people from other groups such as people from the Middle East or Central Asia 1 However many Middle Eastern and South Asian people in the Anglophone world self identify as Brown considering their skin color central to their identity 27 28 Many Hispanics particularly mestizos have self identified as the Bronze race la raza de bronce since the 20th century 29 The term Olive has sometimes been used to refer variously to Mediterranean South Asian Latin American and Pacific Islander people 30 31 Symbolism and uses of color terminology editFurther information Black people and White people The Martinique born French Frantz Fanon and African American writers Langston Hughes Maya Angelou and Ralph Ellison among others wrote that negative symbolisms surrounding the word black outnumber positive ones They argued that the good vs bad dualism associated with white and black unconsciously frame prejudiced colloquialisms In the 1970s the term black replaced Negro in the United States 32 Tone gradations edit In some societies people can be sensitive to gradations of skin tone which may be due to miscegenation or to albinism and which can affect power and prestige In 1930s Harlem slang such gradations were described by a tonescale of high yaller yellow yaller high brown vaseline brown seal brown low brown dark brown 33 These terms were sometimes referred to in blues music both in the words of songs and in the names of performers In 1920s Georgia Willie Perryman followed his older brother Rufus in becoming a blues piano player both were albino Negroes with pale skin reddish hair and poor eyesight Rufus was already well established as Speckled Red Willie became Piano Red 34 The piano player and guitarist Tampa Red from the same state developed his career in Chicago at that time his name may have come from his light skin tone or possibly reddish hair More recently such categorization has been noted in the Caribbean It is reported that skin tones play an important role in defining how Barbadians view one another and they use terms such as brown skin light skin fair skin high brown red and mulatto 35 An assessment of racism in Trinidad notes people often being described by their skin tone with the gradations being HIGH RED part White part Black but clearer than Brown skin HIGH BROWN More white than Black light skinned DOUGLA part Indian and part Black LIGHT SKINNED or CLEAR SKINNED Some Black but more White TRINI WHITE Perhaps not all White behaves like others but skin White 36 In Jamaica albinism has been stigmatized but the albino dancehall singer Yellowman took his stage name in protest against such prejudice and has helped to end this stereotype United States edit Racial segregation in the United States was based on a binary classification white vs non white in which white was held to imply purity so that anyone with even the slightest amount of non white ancestry was excluded from white privileges and there could be no category of racially mixed people In 1896 this doctrine was upheld in the Plessy v Ferguson Supreme Court case Traditionally the main distinction was between white and black but Japanese Americans could be accepted on both sides of the divide As further racial groups were categorized white became narrowly construed and everyone else was categorised as a person of color suggesting that white people have no race while racial subdivision of those of color was unimportant 37 At college campus protests during the 1960s a Flag of the Races was in use with five stripes comprising red black brown yellow and white tones 38 unreliable source In the 2000 United States Census two of the five self designated races are labeled by a color 21 In the 2000 US Census White refers to person having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe the Middle East or North Africa 21 In the 2000 US Census Black or African American refers to a person having origins in any of the Black racial groups of Africa 21 The other three self designated races are not labeled by color 21 This is due to historic negative associations of terms like Yellow for East Asians and Red for Native Americans with racism 22 23 However some Asian Americans and Native Americans have tried to reclaim these color terms by self identifying as Yellow and Red respectively 24 26 Though not an official color or racial designation in the United States census Brown has been used to describe certain peoples such as Arab Americans and Indian Americans 27 28 39 Many Middle Eastern Americans have criticized the United States Census for denying them a racial designation as they are classified as White by the United States census 27 Furthermore though Asian as a racial term in the United States groups together ethnically diverse Asian peoples such as the Chinese Indians Filipinos and Japanese its common usage has been criticized for only referring to East Asians This has led some South and Southeast Asian Americans to use the term Brown Asian to separate themselves from East Asian Americans 28 See also editBiological anthropology also known as physical anthropology References edit a b Oliver Pamela Elaine 2017 11 11 Race Names doi 10 31235 osf io 7wys2 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help The Descent of Man p225 Race Is Real but not in the way Many People Think Agustin Fuentes Psychology Today com 9 April 2012 The Royal Institution panel discussion What Science Tells us about Race and Racism 16 March 2016 Archived from the original on 2021 12 13 Jorde Lynn B Wooding Stephen P 2004 Genetic variation classification and race Nature 36 11 Suppl S28 S33 doi 10 1038 ng1435 PMID 15508000 S2CID 15251775 Ancestry then is a more subtle and complex description of an individual s genetic makeup than is race This is in part a consequence of the continual mixing and migration of human populations throughout history Because of this complex and interwoven history many loci must be examined to derive even an approximate portrayal of individual ancestry Michael White Why Your Race Isn t Genetic Pacific Standard Retrieved 13 December 2014 O ngoing contacts plus the fact that we were a small genetically homogeneous species to begin with has resulted in relatively close genetic relationships despite our worldwide presence The DNA differences between humans increase with geographical distance but boundaries between populations are as geneticists Kenneth Weiss and Jeffrey Long put it multilayered porous ephemeral and difficult to identify Pure geographically separated ancestral populations are an abstraction There is no reason to think that there ever were isolated homogeneous parental populations at any time in our human past Among the Greeks and Romans who have provided the fullest description of blacks the Africans color was regarded as their most characteristic and most unusual feature In this respect the ancients were not unlike whites of later generations who used color terms as a kind of shorthand to denote Africans and those of African descent Frank M Snowden Before Color Prejudice The Ancient View of Blacks Harvard University Press 1991 p 7 Arca Noae sive historia imperiorum et regnorum condito orbe ad nostra tempora Officina Hackiana Leiden 1666 p 37 Alias pro colorum diversitate commode quoque distinxeris posteros Noachi inalbos qui sunt Scythae amp Japhetaei nigros qui sunt Aethiopes amp Chamae flavos qui sunt Indi amp Semaei ItaIudaeiin Glossea Misnae tractatu Sanhedrin fol 18 dicuntur ut buxus nec nigri nec albi quales fere sunt omnes a Semo orti Anonymous F Bernier Nouvelle division de la terre par les differentes especes ou races qui l habitent Journal des Scavants 24 April 1684 p 133 140 See also Charles Frankel La science face au racisme 1986 41f Linnaeus Syst Nat ed 10 Vol 1 p 21 Blumenbach Johann Friedrich 1779 Handbuch der Naturgeschichte p 63 Smith Charles Hamilton Kneeland Samuel 1851 The Natural History of the Human Species Gould and Lincoln A Barkhaus Rassen in Hansjorg Bay Kai Merten eds Die Ordnung der Kulturen zur Konstruktion ethnischer nationaler und zivilisatorischer Differenzen 1750 1850 2006 p 39 44 Kant 1775 432 cited after Barkhaus 2006 44 Painter Nell Irvin Yale University Why White People are Called Caucasian 2003 September 27 2007 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 10 20 Retrieved 2014 05 13 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Keevak Michael Becoming Yellow A Short History of Racial Thinking Princeton University Press 2011 ISBN 0 6911 4031 6 Eigen Sara The German Invention of Race Suny Press New York 2006 ISBN 0 7914 6677 9 p 205 Franzieka Hannah Berghahn Books 2004 ISBN 1 57181 857 X James Cowles Prichard s Anthropology Remaking the Science of Man in Early Baum Bruce David The Rise and Fall of the Caucasian Race A Political History of Racial Identity New York University 2006 ISBN 0 8147 9892 6 Stoddard Lothrop 1920 The Rising Tide of Color Against White World Supremacy United States Charles Scribner s Sons ISBN 4 87187 849 X Adams Bradley J 2007 Forensic Anthropology USA Chelsea House Page 44 ISBN 978 0 7910 9198 2 Retrieved June 12 2017 from link a b c d e US Census Bureau Race 2000 Accessed July 14 2008 Archived August 31 2009 at the Wayback Machine a b Yang Tim 19 February 2004 The Malleable Yet Undying Nature of the Yellow Peril Dartmouth College Archived from the original on 2 January 2015 a b What is the definition of redskin Oxford University Press Archived from the original on September 16 2016 a b Wong Joan December 21 2018 Beautiful and empowering Was 2018 the year Asian Americans took yellow back NBC News Kat Chow September 27 2018 If We Called Ourselves Yellow NPR Podcast Event occurs at 6 25 AM a b Ross Gyasi 2013 10 16 Redskins A Native s Guide To Debating An Inglorious Word Deadspin Archived from the original on 2014 11 12 a b c Bayoumi Moustafa 14 February 2019 I m a brown Arab American and the US census refuses to recognize me The Guardian a b c Schiavenza Matt October 19 2016 Why Some Brown Asians Feel Left Out of the Asian American Conversation Asia Society Nervo Amado 1902 La Raza de Bronce Olive Skin Countries 2023 World Population Review 2023 Gates Clifford E 1922 The Polynesians Caucasians of the Pacific The Scientific Monthly 15 3 257 262 Black black or African American Archived 2009 04 13 at the Wayback Machine Aly Colon Zora Neale Hurston s Glossary of Harlem Slang Tonescale The Blues Collection issue 68 Piano Red Contribution by Tony Russell 1996 Barbados Post Report eDiplomat RACISM IN TRINIDAD pdf Zack Naomi 1995 American Mixed Race The Culture of Microdiversity Rowman amp Littlefield pp 53 56 ISBN 978 0 8476 8013 9 Symbols of Pride of the LGBTQ Community Carleton College Archived from the original on 2008 09 07 Retrieved 2018 03 17 Kulkarni Saili S April 24 2021 South Asians Are Asians Too When Will Our Racial Reckoning Be Ms Retrieved March 24 2022 yet we didn t similarly rally for the Brown South Asians killed in Indianapolis Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Color terminology for race amp oldid 1182082451, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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