The Victorian Reinvention of Race: New Racisms and the Problem of Grouping in the Human Sciences

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Routledge, Jul 2, 2010 - History - 258 pages

In mid-Victorian England there were new racial categories based upon skin colour. The 'races' familiar to those in the modern west were invented and elaborated after the decline of faith in Biblical monogenesis in the early nineteenth century, and before the maturity of modern genetics in the middle of the twentieth. Not until the early nineteenth century would polygenetic and racialist theories win many adherents. But by the middle of the nineteenth century in England, racial categories were imposed upon humanity. How the idea of 'race' gained popularity in England at that time is the central focus of The Victorian Reinvention of Race: New Racisms and the Problem of Grouping in the Human Sciences.

Scholars have linked this new racism to some very dodgy thinkers. The Victorian Reinvention of Race examines a more influential set of the era's writers and colonial officials, some French but most of them British. Attempting to do serious social analysis, these men oversimplified humanity into biologically-heritable, mentally and morally unequal, colour-based 'races'. Thinkers giving in to this racist temptation included Alexis de Tocqueville when he was writing on Algeria; Arthur de Gobineau (who influenced the Nazis); Walter Bagehot of The Economist; and Charles Darwin (whose Descent of Man was influenced by Bagehot). Victorians on Race also examines officials and thinkers (such as Tocqueville in Democracy in America, the Duke of Argyll, and Governor Gordon of Fiji) who exercised methodological care, doing the hard work of testing their categories against the evidence. They analyzed human groups without slipping into racial categorization. Author Edward Beasley examines the extent to which the Gobineau-Bagehot-Darwin way of thinking about race penetrated the minds of certain key colonial governors. He further explores the hardening of the rhetoric of race-prejudice in some quarters in England in the nineteenth century – the processes by which racism was first formed.

 

Contents

Acknowledgements ix
Tocqueville and Race 24
Gobineau Bagehots Precursor 44
The Common Sense of Walter Bagehot 63
Bagehot Rewrites Gobineau 81
Darwin and Race 97
Argyll Race and Degeneration 112
Frederick Weld and the Unnamed Neighbours 129
By Way of a ConclusionArthur Gordon 147
Notes 161
Index 239

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About the author (2010)

Edward Beasley is Associate Professor of History at San Diego State University. He is the author of Empire as the Triumph of Theory: Imperialism, Information, and the Colonial Society of 1868 (London: Routledge, 2004), and Mid-Victorian Imperialists: British Gentlemen and the Empire of the Mind (London: Routledge, 2005).

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