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2 - Epistemological assumptions in the study of racial differentiation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 June 2011

Michael Banton
Affiliation:
University of Bristol
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Summary

Looking back on 1948 with the advantages of hindsight, it can be seen that the publication in that year of Oliver C. Cox's Caste, Class and Race was an event of much greater significance than was appreciated at the time. Cox's challenge to what he called ‘the new orthodoxy’ of Robert Park and Ruth Benedict, with whom he associated Lloyd Warner and Gunnar Myrdal, was the opening salvo in an exchange of fire that may have reached its climax in the 1970s. In this paper I seek to clarify the nature of the dispute and to describe some of the ways in which it has developed. If there is a simple illustration of the difference between the two positions it is that Park would probably (like his contemporary Malinowski) have asked students ‘what is your problem?’, whereas the question for Cox and his successors is ‘what is the problem?’.

Cox's dissent

What distinguished Cox's philosophy of social science can best be seen in his statements about how the phenomena of racial relations are to be defined. Early in the section of the book devoted to race he sets out to eliminate certain concepts that he believes to be commonly confused with that of race relations. One of the concepts to be eliminated is that of racism, because studies of its origin substitute ‘the history of a system of rationalization for that of a material social fact’ (1948: 321).

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1986

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