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The origins of racism in the west / edited by Miriam Eliav-Feldon, Benjamin Isaac and Joseph Ziegler.

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Van Pelt Library HT1507 .O75 2013
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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Eliav-Feldon, Miriam, 1946- editor.
Isaac, Benjamin H., editor.
Ziegler, Joseph, 1959- editor.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Racism--History--Congresses.
Racism.
Race awareness--History--Congresses.
Race awareness.
Race relations--History--Congresses.
Race relations.
Civilization, Western--Congresses.
Civilization, Western.
History.
Genre:
Conference papers and proceedings.
History.
Physical Description:
xiv, 333 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Edition:
First paperback edition.
Place of Publication:
Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2013.
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.
Contents:
Introduction / Benjamin Isaac, Joseph Ziegler, Miriam Eliav-Feldon
Racism: a rationalization of prejudice in Greece and Rome / Benjamin Isaac
The invention of Persia in Classical Athens / H. A. Shapiro
Racism, color symbolism, and color prejudice / David Goldenberg
Early Christian universalism and modern forms of racism / Denise Kimber Buell
Illustrating ethnicity in the Middle Ages / Robert Bartlett
Proto-racial thought in medieval science / Peter Biller
Physiognomy, science, and proto-racism 1200-1500 / Joseph Ziegler
Noble dogs, noble blood: the invention of the concept of race in the late Middle Ages / Charles De Miramon
The carnal knowing of a coloured body: sleeping with Arabs and Blacks in the European imagination, 1300-1550 / Valentin Groebner
Was there race before modernity? The example of 'Jewish' blood in late medieval Spain / David Nirenberg
Religion and race: Protestant and Catholic discourses on Jewish conversations in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries / Ronnie Po-Chia Hsia
Vagrants or vermin? Attitudes towards Gypsies in early modern Europe / Miriam Eliav-Feldon
The peopling of the New World: ethnos, race and empire in the early-modern world / Anthony Pagden
Demons, stars, and the imagination: the early modern body in the Tropics / Jorge Canizares-Esguerra.
Notes:
Originally published: 2009.
Essays based mostly on lectures given at the Howard Gilman International Conference entitled "Racism in Western Civilization before 1700" held at Tel Aviv University on 13-15 Dec. 2005.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
9781107687264
1107687268
OCLC:
841672335

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