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Revista de Estudios Sociales

Print version ISSN 0123-885X

Abstract

HERING TORRES, Max S. “RACE”: HISTORICAL VARIABLES. rev.estud.soc. [online]. 2007, n.26, pp.16-27. ISSN 0123-885X.

This article addresses “race” as a social practice, a construction, and as an idea that has been developed through the power of discourse. This category, rather than a biological reality, is an intellectual and social construction which has had a variety of meanings attributed to it through history. The concept of “race,” however, has preserved its functionality: to differentiate, segregate, and distort otherness. In this way, it has racialized social relations through biological determinism. To substantiate this hypothesis, the article undertakes a historical analysis to demonstrate the dynamics and variability of the racial imaginary. It sketches the outline of a history of race that includes the Spanish idea of the “Purity of Blood” (16-17th centuries), the legitimizing discourses of the French nobility (17-18th centuries), the ambivalence of the Enlightenment, as well as 19th century scientifi c racism as a prelude of the Holocaust or Shoah. The article concludes with some refl ections derived from genetics as additional proof of the fi ctional nature of the concept of “race.”

Keywords : Race; racism; otherness; theology; science; Europe, 15th to 20th centuries.

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