Introduction: Anthropology and the Legacies of Race Book Chapter

Pierre, J, Rahier, JM. (2026). Introduction: Anthropology and the Legacies of Race . 1-16. 10.1017/9781009091862.001

cited authors

  • Pierre, J; Rahier, JM

authors

abstract

  • Our starting point in this book is that across the globe, race - and its articulations with other forms of identification, ideology, and practice - remains one of the key conceptual tools to secure sociopolitical dominance, develop cultural politics of resistance, and engage in self-identification. Yet race opens up a major field of contradiction and misunderstanding. On the one hand, the ideas and practices of race that emerged with European expansion and colonization have impacted all modern societies - even as we should be sensitive to the particularity of histories and experiences in different places. On the other hand, the general accepted view is that there is no such thing as biological race; race is socially constructed, and its meanings are created for sociopolitical ends. Along with many others, we take the view that, while biological race is not “real, " “folk” ideas about it continue to proliferate as if race were natural, shaping sociopolitical relations and cultural practices.

publication date

  • January 1, 2026

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 1

end page

  • 16