Literature DB >> 18755531

Race, populations, and genomics: Africa as laboratory.

Lundy Braun1, Evelynn Hammonds.   

Abstract

Much of the recent debate over race, genetics, and health has focused on the extent to which typological notions of race have biological meaning. Less attention, however, has been paid to the assumptions about the nature of "populations" that both inform contemporary biological and medical research and that underlie the concept of race. Focusing specifically on Africa in the 1930s and 1940s, this paper explores the history of how fluid societies were transformed into bounded units amenable to scientific analysis. In the so-called "Golden Age of Ethnography," university-trained social anthropologists, primarily from Britain and South Africa, took to the field to systematically study, organize, and order the world's diverse peoples. Intent on creating a scientific methodology of neutral observation, they replaced amateur travelers, traders, colonial administrators, and missionaries as authoritative knowledge producers about the customs, beliefs, and languages of indigenous peoples. At the same time, linguists were engaged in unifying African languages and mapping language onto primordial "tribal" territories. We argue that the notion of populations or "tribes" as discrete units suitable for scientific sampling and classification emerged in the 1930s and 1940s with the ethnographic turn in social anthropology and the professionalization and institutionalization of linguistics in Western and South African universities. Once named and entered into international atlases and databases by anthropologists in the U.S., the existence of populations as bounded entities became self-evident, thus setting the stage for their use in large-scale population genetic studies and the contemporary reinvigoration of broad claims of difference based on population identification.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18755531     DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.07.018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  3 in total

1.  Introduction to the Special Issue.

Authors:  Sarah Gehlert; Darrell L Hudson
Journal:  Race Soc Probl       Date:  2013-06

2.  Homogeneity and heterogeneity as situational properties: producing--and moving beyond?--race in post-genomic science.

Authors:  Janet K Shim; Katherine Weatherford Darling; Martine D Lappe; L Katherine Thomson; Sandra Soo-Jin Lee; Robert A Hiatt; Sara L Ackerman
Journal:  Soc Stud Sci       Date:  2014-08       Impact factor: 3.885

3.  Race and ancestry in the age of inclusion: technique and meaning in post-genomic science.

Authors:  Janet K Shim; Sara L Ackerman; Katherine Weatherford Darling; Robert A Hiatt; Sandra Soo-Jin Lee
Journal:  J Health Soc Behav       Date:  2014-11-06
  3 in total

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