Origins and Demise of the Concept of Race by Charles Hirschman
In modern times, the reality of race is indisputable, especially for American eyes. Racial discrimination is not just skin deep and based on skin color, features and hair texture, but it has rather existed since ancient times to date, with age-old exploitation and discrimination. Through this essay, Hirschman discusses the theory of racism history, in relation to social science. He concludes that this concept of race and racism is not a primordial or ancestral belief rather it has developed with modernity over the past 40 decades and reached its pinnacle in the early twentieth century (385).
Since ancient times, cultural diversity evolved naturally as people learned to survive and settle in different climatic zones and their physical features like skin color and hair varied according to climatic conditions. Different outcomes were recorded as they interacted; some were accommodated calmly while others faced antagonism, fear and conflicts. This feeling of fear and social distance is taken by the concept of ethnocentrism, which, as defined by Simpson and Yinger, is human tendency to believe in self-righteousness and natural aversion to other's belief (Hirschman 388). According to recent psychological research, such anger against an alien group can create prejudice, and in conflicts, can motivate people to attack those who behave and speak differently. While racism is different from ethnocentrism, it believes that all humankind is divided into different races with varied characteristics and abilities as per their genes and other genetic biological features, which can never change even...
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