Está en la página 1de 2

in relation to ‘black’ and ‘white’.

The notion of
‘ethnic groups’ was frequently applied to differentiate between
whites by countries of origin in (white) Europe.
Many va York, donde confirmó su pasión por la música de Miles Davis, aunque aquí también las
consideraciones políticas dejaron su huella, y en un determinado momento los contactos del joven
activista llevaron a que le fuera denegado el visado de entrada a Estados unidos. Estando aún en
Oxford, Stuart se unió a Raphael Samuel, Charles Taylor y Gabriel Pearson en la fundación de
Universities and Left Review, cuyo primer número apareció en 1957. Junto con el New Reasoner,
que fue dirigido por un grupo de disidentes del Partido Comunista expulsados, entre otros, Edward
thompson, Dorothy thompson y John saville, Universities and Left Review jugó un papel central en
la conformación de la New Left en Gran Bretaña, y en 1960 las dos revistas se fusionaron para
convertirse en la New Left Review. Edward podría haber sido el editor de la nueva revista, pero
declinó porque, tras años de intenso compromiso político, quería tiempo para la investigación y la
escritura. Stuart daba el perfil. Era un orador fluido y convincente, y su experiencia como editor
activo en Universities and Left Review hacía de él la elección natural para cubrir el puesto. las
publicaciones de la New Left habían dado lugar a un movimiento, y en diferentes partes del país
surgieron unas tres docenas de clubes de esta nueva izquierda. Era la época dorada de la Campaña
para el Desarme Nuclear (cnd), en cuyo seno la New Left jugaría un papel como facción distintiva.
la primera marcha de aldermaston se celebró en 1958, y los clubes New Left debatieron sobre
política exterior –«neutralismo positivo» era la frase por entonces–, así como sobre política nacional.
El london
F. J. Davis
2001). The white race ‘was defi ned by the absence of any
non-white blood and the black race was defi ned by the presence
of any black blood’ (Rodriguez and Cordero-Guzman
1992) – an asymmetrical defi nition refl ecting US inequalities
of power. The important conclusion is the much wider one
that they correctly draw:
Popular defi nitions of ‘race’ vary from culture to culture [suggesting]
the importance of historical events, development or
context in determining ‘race’.
Their evidence is drawn from a study of the racial or cultural
identifi cations of Puerto Ricans in an interview survey.
Their study was able to discount any idea that Hispanic
respondents did not understand the question or that they
simply searched for an intermediate (between white and

It is even possible to see the term ‘real whites’ (López and


Stanton-Salazar 2001) referring to non-Hispanic whites, the
latest twist in the long US story of defi ning whiteness (see
also Rodriguez 2000).
David Hollinger’s Postethnic America (1995), subtitled
‘Beyond Multiculturalism’ adds a contrasting viewpoint.
Rather than suggest that the US race classifi cation is breaking
up, he is concerned that there are intellectual and political
fl ows in exactly the opposite direction. The intellectual fl ow
is in the direction of recognizing that the term ‘race’ is obsolete;
but the practical (administrative) and political fl ow is
tending to consolidate the ‘recognition’ of races in American
life. In administrative practice, fi ve racial categories – white,
black or African American, Asian, American Indian and
Alaska native, Native Hawaiian and other Pacifi c islander,
plus a ‘some other race’ category – are increasingly deployed
not only in the Census but also as instruments of public
policy. Hollinger describes the routine nature of these categories,
plus the quasi-racial category ‘Hispanic’:
On application forms and questionnaires, individuals are
routinely invited to declare themselves to be one of the following:
Euro-American (or sometimes white), Asian American,
African American, Hispanic (or sometimes Latino) and Indigenous
peoples (Native American). (Hollinger 1995, p. 23)
This he calls the ‘ethno-racial’ pentagon, or the fi ve great
‘ethno-racial blocs’ which resemble the global categories of
nineteenth- and early twentieth-century scientifi c racism –
Caucasian, Mongoloid, Negroid, Amerindian – with Hispanic
as the outlier. The ‘great races’ are embedded in the
American imagination and are reproduced by the US Census.
Hollinger believes this classifi cation persists in popular
thought, despite the recognition of the concept of races as a
scientifi c and historical error:

También podría gustarte