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Sociological Conceptment : Race As A Social Concept

Decent Essays

Q1: Race as a social concept
Omi and Winant say that race is a social concept, not a biological one. Explain this idea and how it relates to the readings by Brodkin, Ngai, Sethi, Portes or Navarro (pick at least two of the authors listed to discuss).
Omi and Winant (1986) demonstrate throughout the reading that race is a social concept and not a biological one because, as a society, we place underlying meaning based on the superficial differences in appearance between people (pp.11-20). Omi and Winant (1986) rationalize that the meaning society places on people and the correlating differences between them are not scientifically founded (pp.11-20). There is no science to back up the implied personification or characterization society assumes on people based on the appearance of a certain race; even these sociality implied attributes change over time and from place to place (Omi & Winant, 1986, pp. 11-20). Furthermore, this underlying meaning placed on groups of persons changes not just with time, but also with necessity, political climate, economy, popular opinion/media exposure, and times of war, etc (Omi & Winant, 1986, pp. 11-20). Even so, these socially implied differences are often accepted as fact and entire societal systems are built around these underlying beliefs (Omi & Winant, 1986, pp. 11-20).
This social concept of race, not biological, relates to Brodkin’s (1998) introduction that even the grouping of ethnic origins that is considered today as White people

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