1 / 23

Chapter 1

Chapter 1. Diversity & Unity in U.S. Society. SOC 327 Race & Ethnic Relations. What Does it Mean to Be an American?. Nation of Immigrants Nation of Laws Nation of Peoples Big World Power: Global Hegemon of the World-System since WW II

heinz
Download Presentation

Chapter 1

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 1 Diversity & Unity in U.S. Society SOC 327 Race & Ethnic Relations

  2. What Does it Mean to Be an American? • Nation of Immigrants • Nation of Laws • Nation of Peoples • Big World Power: Global Hegemon of the World-System since WW II • More than merely a powerful national state but one with global responsibilities & privileges

  3. Nation of Immigrants? • ancestral vs. recent • free vs. indentured vs. enslaved • European vs. non-European • economic (“immigrant”) vs. political (“refugee”) vs. visitor (“tourist”, “business”) • documented (“legal”) vs. undocumented (“illegal”) vs. temporary (“guest worker”)

  4. Nation of Laws? • Constitution’s Bill of Rights (of individuals) • Federalism & separation of powers in 3 federal branches (executive, legislative, judicial) • Separation of Church & State • Domestic “rule of law”: political elections, business, property, labor relations, security and protection • Global superpower pursuing its “national interest” everywhere and “leading the world” • According to international law (openly, diplomatically) • In defiance of international law (covertly or flauntingly)

  5. Nation of Peoples? Who is “We the People”? • Nation-building along one race or more races • Nation-building along one or many religions • Nation-building along one or more cultures • Nation-building along one or more languages • Nation-building above, along, or under region- building (North America), or world-building

  6. American Visions of Being • I. 1609-1776 Colonial Periphery <--> plantation racial triangles • II. 1776-1898 Republican Ascendancy <--> Great White Republic & Internal (Continental) Empire • III. 1898-1945 Young World Power <--> External Empire & Domestic American Apartheid • IV. 1945-1965 Global Hegemon <--> World Supremacy & Domestic Assimilationist Dream

  7. American Visions of Being • V. 1965-2001 Hegemonic ‘Signal’ Crisis <--> Rise and demise of international multilateralism & domestic multicultural society paradigm • VI. 2001-Now Hegemonic ‘Terminal’ Crisis <--> International Imperial Project & domestic anti-ethnicity/immigration backlashes • VII. XXI Century Conundrum: Who’s going to be We? • - Who’s what? <-> the definitions themselves are in crisis • - Who’s “entitled” to what? <-> who’s got what “rights”? • Tensions among subnational, national, regional, global peoplehoods? (micro-macro-global levels): are they all equally legitimate? Or in what order of importance or status? • These conundrums are found everywhere in the world!

  8. Latin American Visions of Being • 1492-1820s Colonial Periphery <--> exploitation colonies racial caste system • 1820s-1910 <--> Fragmented criollo “liberal” vs “conservative” nation-building (retaining the de facto Eurocentric color line) • 1910-1980s <--> National Developmentalism & Lat. Am./Third World independence efforts • 1980s-now <--> “Neoliberal” Globalization, & rebirth of a political vision of Latin American integration & the rise of Indigenous identities • * NAFTA in North America fails to become FTAA • * ALBA, UNASUR, Latin Am. & Carib. Alliance • * Zapatistas, Evo Morales, CONAIE, Rigoberta Menchu

  9. Social Stratification • An historical system of unequal distribution of power, wealth and social status • Marx’s single class-based model in successive modes of production • Weber’s triple Class, Political Parties, and Status Groups model • Lenski’s typologies based on successive subsistence technologies

  10. Ethnic/Racial Stratification Social stratification based on ethnicity or race: • Ancient caste systems (India, China) • Modern colonial “dual” or “plural” societies (16th - 20th centuries) • Modern national “dual” or “plural” societies: formal (U.S. <1965) or masked (Latin America) • Current fluid processes of race/ethnic relations in most countries

  11. Definition of “Minority” Group A social category that exists within the nation-state and in relation to nation-building: 1. Experience of pattern of disadvantage or inequality 2. Share visible distinguishing trait or characteristic 3. Community of consciousness 4. Ascribed status at birth 5. Tendency for endogamy

  12. “Majority-Minority” Relations What they are all about: • Relations of power • Building the national or colonial model • Reflective & exclusive self-definitions • Embedded in historical & structural dynamics at the local & global levels (economic/political/cultural) • Dynamic of cooperation & conflict • Cause and effect of ethnogenesis & ethnotransformations

  13. “Racial Minorities” • Differentiated by selected physical characteristics socially constructed as significant and determinant • Racial outlook is inherently evaluative, hierarchical and immutable • No real races: only historically located racialization & deracialization processes that accompany the subjugation & liberation of groups

  14. “Ethnic Minorities” • Lite races: the Cultural Others among Us (European immigrant origins) • Subject to ethnotransformations into majorities, today’s panethnicities, etc • Their world ubiquity/plasticity reflect: • the 21th-century fading of race as a world paradigm of social stratification, • the crisis of nation-stateness as a result of other processes: global (immigration, globalization) or local (domestic resistance to political, regional, cultural dominance)

  15. The Increasing Variety of American Minority Groups

  16. Gender Stratification • Social stratification based on gender • Patriarchal traditional systems • Modern legal, cultural, & economic barriers to gender equality • Binary sexual preference embedded in the legal code: homosexual/heterosexual

  17. Visible Distinguishing Traits

  18. Other Kinds of Stratification • Social class: narrow (occupational) or holistic(peasants, lords, bourgeoisie, etc.) • Age: minors, elderly treatment • Educational Credentials: degrees • Caste inequalities (nonracialized) • Physical (Dis)Ability • Citizenship status

More Related