The Origins of Racism in the West

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Edition: 1st
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2009-08-31
Publisher(s): Cambridge University Press
List Price: $126.00

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Summary

Is it possible to speak of western racism before the eighteenth century? The term 'racism' is normally only associated with theories, which first appeared in the eighteenth century, about inherent biological differences that made one group superior to another. Here, however, leading historians argue that racism can be traced back to the attitudes of the ancient Greeks to their Persian enemies and that it was adopted, adjusted and re-formulated by Europeans right through until the dawn of the Enlightenment. From Greek teachings on environmental determinism and heredity, through medieval concepts of physiognomy, down to the crystallization of attitudes to Indians, Blacks, Jews and Gypsies in the early modern era, they analyse the various routes by which racist ideas travelled before maturing into murderous ideologies in the modern western world. In so doing this book offers a major reassessment of the place of racism in pre-modern European thought.

Table of Contents

List of illustrationsp. vii
Notes on contributorsp. x
Acknowledgementsp. xiii
Introductionp. 1
Racism: a rationalization of prejudice in Greece and Romep. 32
The invention of Persia in Classical Athensp. 57
Racism, color symbolism, and color prejudicep. 88
Early Christian universalism and modern forms of racismp. 109
Illustrating ethnicity in the Middle Agesp. 132
Proto-racial thought in medieval sciencep. 157
Physiognomy, science, and proto-racism 1200-1500p. 181
Noble dogs, noble blood: the invention of the concept of race in the late Middle Agesp. 200
The carnal knowing of a coloured body: sleeping with Arabs and Blacks in the European imagination, 1300-1550p. 217
Was there race before modernity? The example of 'JewishÆ blood in late medieval Spainp. 232
Religion and race: Protestant and Catholic discourses on Jewish conversions in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuriesp. 265
Vagrants or vermin? Attitudes towards-Gypsies in early modern Europep. 276
The peopling of the New World: ethnos, race and empire in the early-modern worldp. 292
Demons, stars, and the imagination: the early modern body in the Tropicsp. 313
Indexp. 326
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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