Colonial recursion: state categories of race and the emergence of the “Non-Western Allochthone”

IF 0.9 2区 社会学 Q3 SOCIOLOGY American Journal of Cultural Sociology Pub Date : 2024-05-08 DOI:10.1057/s41290-024-00214-y
Yannick Coenders
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Abstract

Recent scholarship on state-based race categories shows that racial classification is anything but stable and self-evident. Indeed, states continuously change the number of racial categories, their labels, and methodology for classification. Yet, despite the instability that characterizes official racial classification, colonial distinctions between Western and non-Western continue to shape racial taxonomies. This article advances an analytic of recursion to explain this continuity. Recursion refers to cultural processes that sustain and reanimate colonial logics of race beyond formal colonial contexts. I highlight three processes in particular: recuperation, modification, and reinscription. I demonstrate the utility of a recursive analytic through a historical analysis of the twentieth-century emergence of the novel Dutch race category “non-western allochthone.” Examining government reports and social science research on immigrant populations, I trace how state officials and prominent social scientists drew on and recalibrated a colonial binary distinction between Europeanness/whiteness and non-Europeanness/non-whiteness to distinguish supposedly assimilable from unassimilable migrants. A recursive analysis illuminates how changes to official taxonomies do not necessarily unsettle, and may even rest on, durable colonial conceptions of race.

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殖民递归:国家对种族的分类和 "非西方阿罗克松 "的出现
最近关于以州为基础的种族类别的学术研究表明,种族分类并非稳定和不言自明。事实上,国家不断改变种族类别的数量、标签和分类方法。然而,尽管官方种族分类具有不稳定性,但西方与非西方之间的殖民区分仍在继续塑造着种族分类法。本文通过对递归的分析来解释这种连续性。递归指的是在正式的殖民语境之外,维持并重新激活殖民种族逻辑的文化过程。我特别强调了三个过程:恢复、修改和重新标注。我通过对二十世纪荷兰新种族类别 "非西方种族"(non-western allochthone)出现的历史分析,展示了递归分析法的实用性。通过考察有关移民人口的政府报告和社会科学研究,我追溯了国家官员和著名社会科学家是如何借鉴并重新调整欧洲人/白人和非欧洲人/非白人之间的殖民二元区分,以区分所谓的可同化移民和不可同化移民的。递归分析揭示了官方分类法的变化如何并不一定会动摇,甚至可能建立在持久的殖民种族观念之上。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
3.40%
发文量
26
期刊介绍: From modernity''s onset, social theorists have been announcing the death of meaning, at the hands of market forces, impersonal power, scientific expertise, and the pervasive forces of rationalization and industrialization. Yet, cultural structures and processes have proved surprisingly resilient. Relatively autonomous patterns of meaning - sweeping narratives and dividing codes, redolent if elusive symbols, fervent demands for purity and cringing fears of pollution - continue to exert extraordinary effects on action and institutions. They affect structures of inequality, racism and marginality, gender and sexuality, crime and punishment, social movements, market success and citizen incorporation. New and old new media project continuous symbolic reconstructions of private and public life. As contemporary sociology registered the continuing robustness of cultural power, the new discipline of cultural sociology was born. How should these complex cultural processes be conceptualized? What are the best empirical ways to study social meaning? Even as debates rage around these field-specific theoretical and methodological questions, a broadly cultural sensibility has spread into every arena of sociological study, illuminating how struggles over meaning affect the most disparate processes of contemporary social life.Bringing together the best of these studies and debates, the American Journal of Cultural Sociology (AJCS) publicly crystallizes the cultural turn in contemporary sociology. By providing a common forum for the many voices engaged in meaning-centered social inquiry, the AJCS will facilitate communication, sharpen contrasts, sustain clarity, and allow for periodic condensation and synthesis of different perspectives. The journal aims to provide a single space where cultural sociologists can follow the latest developments and debates within the field. The American Journal of Cultural Sociology is indexed by SCOPUS, a database listing journals and country scientific indicators and rankings, and is also indexed in Thomson Reuters’ Web of Science Core Collection, in the Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI). SSCI provides searchable author abstracts for the leading journals in 55 social science disciplines, with a comprehensive backfile of cited reference data from 1900 to the present. AJCS’s inclusion in the SSCI provides greater discoverability for the journal and allows for real-time insight into the citation performance.We welcome high quality submissions of any length and focus: contemporary and historical studies, macro and micro, institutional and symbolic, ethnographic and statistical, philosophical and methodological. Contemporary cultural sociology has developed from European and American roots, and today is an international field. The AJCS will publish rigorous, meaning-centered sociology whatever its origins and focus, and will distribute it around the world.
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