Mongoloid: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Outdated grouping of human beings}} |
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{{Other uses}} |
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'''Mongoloid''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|m|ɒ|ŋ|g|ə|ˌ|l|ɔɪ|d}})<ref>''Mongoloid.'' (2012). Dictionary.com. Retrieved September 3, 2012, from [http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/mongoloid?s=t link].</ref> is an [[Historical race concepts|obsolete racial grouping]] of various peoples indigenous to large parts of [[Asia]], the [[Americas]], and some regions in [[Europe]] and [[Oceania]]. The term is derived from a now-disproven theory of biological race.<ref>{{cite book|author=Templeton, A.|year=2016|chapter=Evolution and Notions of Human Race|editor1=Losos, J.|editor2=Lenski, R. |title=How Evolution Shapes Our Lives: Essays on Biology and Society|pages=346–361|place=Princeton; Oxford|publisher=Princeton University Press|doi=10.2307/j.ctv7h0s6j.26}}</ref> In the past, other terms such as "[[Mongols|Mongolian]] race", "yellow", "Asiatic" and "[[Oriental]]" have been used as synonyms. |
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{{Cleanup|date=March 2007}} |
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{{otheruses4|the Mongoloid race|the song by Devo|Mongoloid (song)}} |
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[[Image:LA2-NSRW-1-0149.jpg|thumb|Asian types in a book from 1914.]] |
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The term "'''Mongoloid'''" is a [[Typology (anthropology)|typological]] [[Race (classification of humans)|racial]] category used to describe people of [[East Asian]] origin. Its use originated from a variation of the word "[[Mongol]]", a people who are considered one of the main proto-populations for the race. The classification is primarily useful when [[Anthropology|studying human]] [[prehistory]], and in [[forensic]] analysis of human remains, in which "Mongoloid" denotes a particular racial [[Craniofacial anthropometry|skull type]]. |
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The concept of dividing humankind into the Mongoloid, [[Caucasoid]], and [[Negroid]] races was introduced in the 1780s by members of the [[Göttingen school of history]]. It was further developed by Western scholars in the context of [[Racism|racist]] ideologies during the age of [[colonialism]].<ref name="AAPARace">{{cite web|author=American Association of Physical Anthropologists|title=AAPA Statement on Race and Racism |website=American Association of Physical Anthropologists|access-date=19 June 2020 |date=27 March 2019 |url=https://physanth.org/about/position-statements/aapa-statement-race-and-racism-2019/}} The organization has since been renamed the [[American Association of Biological Anthropologists]].</ref> With the rise of modern [[genetics]], the concept of distinct human races in a biological sense has become obsolete. In 2019, the [[American Association of Biological Anthropologists]] stated: "The belief in 'races' as natural aspects of human biology, and the structures of inequality (racism) that emerge from such beliefs, are among the most damaging elements in the human experience both today and in the past."<ref name="AAPARace" /> |
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==Populations included== |
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[[Image:Huxley races.png|thumb|300px|[[Thomas Henry Huxley|Huxley]]'s map of racial categories from ''On the Geographical Distribution of the Chief Modifications of Mankind'' ([[1870]]). {{legend|#a14308|[[Capoid]]/[[Bushmen]] (today grouped into [[Africoid]])}} |
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{{legend|#682b05|[[Negroid]]s (today grouped into [[Africoid]])}} |
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{{legend|#ffcccc|[[Mediterranean race|Mediterraneans]] (today grouped into [[Caucasoid]])<ref name=Huxley>[[Thomas Henry Huxley|Huxley, T. H.]] [http://aleph0.clarku.edu/huxley/SM3/GeoDis.html On the Geographical Distribution of the Chief Modifications of Mankind] (1870) ''Journal of the Ethnological Society of London''</ref>}} |
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{{legend|#ff0000|[[White people|Whites]] (today grouped into [[Caucasoid]])<ref name=Huxley/>}} |
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{{legend|#c6520a|Mongoloids A (today grouped into Mongoloid)}} |
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{{legend|#cb780a|Mongoloids B (today grouped into Mongoloid)}} |
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{{legend|#cb970a|[[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native Americans]] (today grouped into Mongoloid)}} |
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{{legend|#f9b90d|[[Eskimo]]s (today grouped into Mongoloid)}} |
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{{legend|#328a85|[[Australoid]]s (today grouped into [[Austronesians|Austronesian]])}} |
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{{legend|#efc417|[[Pacific Islander]]s (today grouped into [[Austronesian]])}} |
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{{legend|#060606|[[Negrito]]es (today grouped into [[Austronesians|Austronesian]])}}]] |
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The term ''Mongoloid'' has had a second usage referencing people with [[Down syndrome]], now generally regarded as highly offensive.<ref name="Smay and Armelagos">{{cite web |last1=Smay |first1=Diana |last2=Armelagos |first2=George |publisher=Emory University |title=Galileo Wept: A Critical Assessment of the Use of Race in Forensic Anthropology |url=http://www.anthropology.emory.edu/FACULTY/ANTGA/Web%20Site/PDFs/Galileo%20Wept-%20A%20Critical%20Assessment%20of%20the%20Use%20of%20Race%20in%20Forensic%20Anthropology.pdf |access-date=2012-10-10 |archive-date=2018-08-18 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180818073338/http://www.anthropology.emory.edu/FACULTY/ANTGA/Web%20Site/PDFs/Galileo%20Wept-%20A%20Critical%20Assessment%20of%20the%20Use%20of%20Race%20in%20Forensic%20Anthropology.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name="Lieberman">{{cite journal |last=Lieberman |first=Leonard |title=Out of Our Skulls: Caucasoid, Mongoloid, Negroid? |doi=10.1111/an.1997.38.9.56 |volume=38 |issue=9 |journal=Anthropology News |page=56 |year=1997}}</ref><ref name="Templeton">{{cite web |last=Templeton |first=Alan R. |work=Washington University |title=Human Races: A Genetic and Evolutionary Perspective |url=http://www.realfuture.org/GIST/Readings/Templeton(1998).pdf |publisher=Realfuture.org}}</ref><ref name="Keevak">Keevak, Michael. "Becoming Yellow: A Short History of Racial Thinking". Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2011. {{ISBN|978-0-691-14031-5}}.</ref> Those affected were often referred to as "Mongoloids" or in terms of "[[Mongolian idiocy]]" or "Mongolian imbecility". |
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The term comes from the [[Mongols|Mongol]] people of East Asia, who had a reputation in Europe for ruthless expansionism and massacre of enemy populations under the [[Mongol Empire]], thereby not garnering a positive implication of the word. The first usage of the term "''Mongolian race''" was by [[Christoph Meiners|Christoph Meiners]] in a "''binary racial scheme''"<!--p.34--> of "''two races''"<!--p.19--> with the Caucasian whose racial purity was exemplified by the "''venerated... ancient Germans''"<!--p.34--> with some Europeans being impure "''dirty whites''"<!-- page 36 --> and "''Mongolians''" who consisted of everyone else.<ref name=Painter>Painter, Nell Irvin. Yale University. "Why White People are Called Caucasian?" 2003. September 27, 2007. [http://www.yale.edu/glc/events/race/Painter.pdf]</ref> <!-- page 34 --> The term "''Mongolian''" was borrowed from Meiners by [[Johann Blumenbach]] to describe "''second [race], [which] includes that part of Asia beyond the Ganges and below the river Amoor <nowiki>[</nowiki>[[Amur]]<nowiki>]</nowiki>, which looks toward the south, together with the islands and the greater part of these countries which is now called Australian.''" <!--p.99--><ref name=Blumtreat>Blumenbach, Johann. <u>The Anthropological Treatise of Johann Friedrich Blumenbach.</u> London: Longman Green, 1865.</ref> In 1861, Isid Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire added the "''Australian''" as a "''secondary race''" (subrace) of the "''principal race''" of "''Mongolian''"<!--p.282--><ref name=Deniker>Deniker, Joseph. <u>The Races of Man: An Outline of Anthropology and Ethnography</u> |
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C. Scribner's Sons: New York, 1900. ISBN 0836959329 </ref> In the nineteenth century [[Georges Cuvier]] used the term "''Mongolian''" again as a racial classification, but additionally included American Indians under the term.<ref>[The End of Racism by Dinesh D'Souza, pg 124]</ref> Later, [[Thomas Huxley]] used the term "Mongoloid" and included American Indians as well as Arctic Native Americans.<ref>[http://aleph0.clarku.edu/huxley/SM3/GeoDis.html Huxley, Thomas, On the Geographical Distribution of the Chief Modifications of Mankind. 1870. August 14, 2006.]</ref> Other nomenclatures were proposed, such as "''Mesochroi''" (middle color),<ref>James Dallas, "On the Primary Divisions and Geographical Distributions of Mankind", 1886 ''Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland'', p.204-10. James describes this as "equivalent to Professor Huxley's Mongoloid division" and as encompassing "Mongols and American Indians"</ref> but "Mongoloid" was widely adopted. In 1915, "''anthropologist Arthur de Gobineau''"<!--p.8--><ref name=anthroGob>DiPiero, Thomas. <u>White Men Aren't</u> |
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Duke University Press, 2002. ISBN 0822329611</ref> defined the extent of the "''Mongolian''" race, "''by the yellow the Altaic, Mongol, Finnish and Tartar branches.''"<!--p.146--><ref name=Gob>{{cite web|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=JeM_1BCeffAC|year=1915|publisher=Putnam|last=Gobineau|first= Arthur|title=The Inequality of Human Races|accessdate=2007-10-18}}</ref> In the 20th century, [[Carleton S. Coon]] used the term and included Pacific Islanders.<ref>[http://www.as.ua.edu/ant/bindon/ant275/presentations/POST_WWII.PDF Jim Bindon, University of Alabama, Post WW2 notions about Human Variation]</ref> In 1983, Futuyma claimed that the inclusion of Native Americans and Pacific Islanders under the Mongoloid race was not recognized by "''many anthropologists''" who consider them "''distinct races''".<ref name=Futuyma>Futuyma, Douglas A. <u>Evolutionary Biology.</u> Massachusetts: Sinauer Associates, 1983. p. 520</ref> For example, in 1984, Roger J. Lederer Professor of Biological Sciences<ref>California State University, Chico. "University Catalog." September 28, 2007. 2003.[http://www.csuchico.edu/catalog/cat03/programs/biol/faculty.html]</ref> separately listed the "''Mongoloid''" race from Pacific islanders and American Indians when he enumerated the "''geographical variants of the same species known as races... we recognize several races Eskimos, American Indians, Mongoloid... Polynesian''"<ref>Lederer Roger J. <u>Ecology and Field Biology.</u> Cummings Publishing Company: California, 1984. ISBN 0-8053-5718-1 p.129</ref>. |
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===Native Americans=== |
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[[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native Americans]] are considered to be derived from a Mongoloid-related population. However, many retain notably untypical features, considered to be due either to their proto-Mongoloid history, representing the broad range of variation found in early northern Asian populations before certain traits became dominant there, or of a hypothetical prexisting Australoid-Caucasoid population swamped by Mongoloid immigration.<ref name=Fiedel>Fiedel, Stuart J. <u>Prehistory of the Americas.</u>Published by Cambridge University Press, 1992 ISBN 0521425441</ref> |
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== History of the concept == |
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Typical traits shared with other Mongoloids are coarse straight black hair, relatively hairless bodies, light brown skin, brown eyes, epicanthic folds, high cheekbones, and a relatively high frequency of shovel-shaped incisor teeth.<ref name=Fiedel /> |
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=== Origins === |
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''Mongolian'' as a term for race was first introduced in 1785 by [[Christoph Meiners]], a scholar at the then modern [[Göttingen University]]. Meiners divided humanity into two races he labeled "Tartar-Caucasians" and "Mongolians", believing the former to be beautiful, the latter to be "weak in body and spirit, bad, and lacking in virtue".<ref name="Painter">{{cite web |first=Nell Irvin |last=Painter |author-link=Nell Irvin Painter |publisher=Yale University |title=Why White People are Called Caucasian? |year=2003 |access-date=September 27, 2007 |url=http://www.yale.edu/glc/events/race/Painter.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131020105628/http://www.yale.edu/glc/events/race/Painter.pdf |archive-date=October 20, 2013 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all}}</ref>{{rp|34}} |
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His more influential Göttingen colleague [[Johann Friedrich Blumenbach]] borrowed the term ''Mongolian'' for his division of humanity into five races in the revised 1795 edition of his ''De generis humani varietate nativa'' (''On the Natural Variety of Mankind''). Although Blumenbach's concept of five races later gave rise to [[scientific racism]], his arguments were basically anti-racist,<ref>{{cite journal |author=Bhopal R |title=The beautiful skull and Blumenbach's errors: the birth of the scientific concept of race |journal=BMJ |volume=335 |issue=7633 |pages=1308–9 |date=December 2007 |pmid=18156242 |pmc=2151154 |doi=10.1136/bmj.39413.463958.80|quote=Blumenbach's name has been associated with scientific racism, but his arguments actually undermined racism. Blumenbach could not have foreseen the coming abuse of his ideas and classification in the 19th and (first half of the) 20th centuries.}}</ref> since he underlined that humankind as a whole forms one single ''species'',<ref>{{cite book |author=Johann Friedrich Blumenbach|title=Handbuch der Naturgeschichte|page=60|year=1797|quote=Es giebt nur eine Gattung (species) im Menschengeschlecht; und alle uns bekannte Völker aller Zeiten und aller Himmelsstriche können von einer gemeinschaftlichen Stammrasse abstammen. |url=http://www.deutschestextarchiv.de/book/view/blumenbach_naturgeschichte_1797?p=82|access-date=2020-05-24}}</ref> and points out that the transition from one race to another is so gradual that the distinctions between the races presented by him are "very arbitrary".<ref>German: "sehr willkürlich": {{cite book |author=Johann Friedrich Blumenbach|title=Handbuch der Naturgeschichte|page=61|year=1797|quote=Alle diese Verschiedenheiten fließen aber durch so mancherley Abstufungen und Uebergänge so unvermerkt zusammen, daß sich keine andre, als sehr willkürliche Grenzen zwischen ihnen festsetzen lassen. |url=http://www.deutschestextarchiv.de/book/view/blumenbach_naturgeschichte_1797?p=83|access-date=2020-05-24}}</ref> In Blumenbach's concept, the ''Mongolian race'' comprises the peoples living in Asia east of the [[Ob River]], the [[Caspian Sea]] and the [[Ganges River]], with the exception of the [[Malays (ethnic group)|Malays]], who are considered to be transitional between Caucasian and Ethiopian.<ref name="Bhopal">{{cite journal |last1=Bhopal |first1=Raj |date=22 December 2007 |title=The beautiful skull and Blumenbach's errors: the birth of the scientific concept of race |journal=BMJ |volume=335 |issue=7633 |pages=1308–1309 |doi=10.1136/bmj.39413.463958.80 |pmc=2151154 |pmid=18156242 |doi-access=free}}</ref> Of peoples living outside Asia, he includes the "[[Eskimo]]s" in northern America and the European [[Finns]], among whom he includes the "[[Sámi people|Lapps]]".<ref>{{cite book |author=Johann Friedrich Blumenbach|title=Handbuch der Naturgeschichte|pages=61–62|year=1797|url=http://www.deutschestextarchiv.de/book/view/blumenbach_naturgeschichte_1797?p=83|access-date=2020-05-24}}</ref> |
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===Akkadians=== |
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John Macmillan Brown identified an "''Ancient Mongoloid Empire in Mesopotamia<ref name=Macmillan /><!--pg. 46--> ...the busts of these Akkadians that have been unearthed show not only the flattened face and high cheek-bones that mark the Mongol, but, long before the Semites from the south mingled with them, the wavy hair and often full eyes of the Caucasian.''" <ref name=Macmillan>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=BNcKAAAAIAAJ|pages=46|last=Brown|first=John Macmillan|title=Maori and Polynesian|publisher=Hutchinson & Co.|year=1907}}</ref> |
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=== In the context of scientific racism === |
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===Origins=== |
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[[File:Huxley races.png|thumb|300px|[[Thomas Henry Huxley|Huxley's]] map of racial categories from ''On the Geographical Distribution of the Chief Modifications of Mankind'' (1870)<ref name="Huxley">[[Thomas Henry Huxley|Huxley, T. H.]] [http://aleph0.clarku.edu/huxley/SM3/GeoDis.html On the Geographical Distribution of the Chief Modifications of Mankind] (1870) ''Journal of the Ethnological Society of London''. Huxley indicates that he has omitted certain areas with complex ethnic compositions that do not fit into his racial paradigm, including much of the Indian subcontinent and Horn of Africa. (Huxley, Thomas (1873). Critiques and Addresses by Thomas Henry Huxley, LL.D., F.R.S. Macmillan and Company. p. 153.) By the late nineteenth century, his Xanthochroi group had been redefined as the [[Nordic race]], whereas his Melanochroi became the [[Mediterranean race]]. As such, Huxley's Melanochroi eventually also comprised various other dark Caucasoid populations, including the [[Hamitic|Hamites]] and [[Moors]]. (Gregory, John Walter (1931). Race as a Political Factor. Watts & Company. p. 19. Retrieved 8 May 2016.)</ref> |
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[[Image:Dalai Lama 1430 Luca Galuzzi 2007crop.jpg|thumb|150px|The 14th [[Dalai Lama]], Tenzin Gyatso in 2007.]] |
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[[Image:130408929 8e1c93800a o.jpg|thumb|150px|Flower [[Hmong]] in traditional dress at the market in [[Sa Pa]], [[Vietnam]].]] |
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In 1865, Thomas Huxley presented the views of polygenesists of which Huxley was not as "''some imagine their assumed species of mankind were created where we find them... the Mongolians from the [[Orangutangs|Orangs]].''"<!--p.247--><ref name=HuxEssay>Huxley, Thomas. <u>Collected Essays of Thomas Huxley: Man's Place in Nature and Other</u> Kessinger Publishing: Montana, 2005. ISBN 1417974621</ref> |
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{{legend|#a14308|1: [[Bushmen]]}} |
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In 1897, WEB DuBois, sociologist and historian, said, "''[t]he final word of science, so far, is that we have at least two perhaps three, great families of human beings -- the whites and Negroes, possibly the yellow race<!--p.85--> [he calls this "Mongolian" later]<!--p.86--><ref name=Bernasconi />. The other races have arisen from the intermingling of the blood of these two.<!--p.85-->''" <ref name=Bernasconi /> Later, there was a "''change in his anthropological view''", where he postulated "''Negroids and Mongoloids are primary, with Caucasoids listed as a type between these, possibly formed by their union, with bleached skin and intermediate hair.''"<!--p.62--><ref name=Bernasconi>Bernasconi, Robert. <u>Race</u> Blackwell Publishing: Boston, 2001. ISBN 063120783X</ref> |
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{{legend|#682b05|2: [[Negroes]]}} |
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{{legend|#060606|3: [[Negritoes]]}} |
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{{legend|#ffcccc|4: [[Melanochroi]]}} |
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{{legend|#328a85|5: [[Australoids]]}} |
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{{legend|#ff0000|6: [[Xanthochroi]]}} |
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{{legend|#efc417|7: [[Polynesians]]}} |
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{{legend|#c6520a|8: Mongoloids A}} |
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{{legend|#cb780a|8: Mongoloids B}} |
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{{legend|#cb970a|8: Mongoloids C}} |
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{{legend|#f9b90d|9: [[Esquimaux]]}}]] |
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Discussions on race among Western scholars during the 19th century took place against the background of the debate between [[Monogenism|monogenists]] and [[Polygenism|polygenists]], the former arguing for a single origin of all humankind, the latter holding that each human race had a specific origin. Monogenists based their arguments either on a literal interpretation of the [[Bible|biblical]] story of [[Adam and Eve]] or on secular research. Since polygenism stressed the perceived differences, it was popular among [[White supremacy|white supremacists]], especially [[Slavery in the United States|slaveholders in the US]].<ref>Ibram X. Kendi, Stamped from the Beginning. The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America, New York: Nation Books 2016. {{ISBN|978-1-5685-8464-5}}, chapters 4, 7–12, 14, 16 ''passim''.</ref> |
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In 1972, Carleton Coon claimed, "''[f]rom a hyborean [sic] group there evolved, in northern Asia, the ancestral strain of the entire specialized mongoloid family.''"<ref>Coon, Carleton S. <u>The Races of Europe.</u> Greenwood: USA, 1972 ISBN 0837163285 p.2</ref> In 1962, Coon believed that the Mongoloid "''subspecies''" existed "''during most of the Pleistocene, from 500,000 to 10,000 years ago''".<!--Chapter13: The Dead and the Living--><ref name=Coonorigin>Coon, Carleton S. <u>The Origin of the Races.</u> Knopf: Michigan, 1962. ISBN-10: 0394301420</ref> According to Coon, the Mongoloid race had not completed its "''invasions and expansions''" into Southeast Asia, the Americas, and the Pacific Islands until "''[t]oward the end of the Pleistocene''"<ref name=Coonorigin /><!--Chapter13: The Dead and the Living--> By this time Coon hypothesis that the Mongoloid race had become "''sapien''".<ref name=Coonorigin /><!--Chapter13: The Dead and the Living--> |
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[[Milford Wolpoff]] and Rachel Caspari characterize "''his [Carleton Coon's] contention [as being] that the Mongoloid race crossed the "sapiens threshold" first and thereby evolved the furthest''".<!--pg. 157--><ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=gjYvEunARoYC|author=Milford Wolpoff and Rachel Caspari|title=Race and Human Evolution: A Fatal Attraction|publisher=Westview Press|date=1998|isbn=0813335469}}</ref> |
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British biologist [[Thomas Huxley]], a strong advocate of [[Darwinism]] and a monogenist, presented the views of polygenists in 1865: "[S]ome imagine their assumed species of mankind were created where we find them... the Mongolians from the [[Orangutangs|Orangs]]".<ref name="HuxEssay">Huxley, Thomas. ''Collected Essays of Thomas Huxley: Man's Place in Nature and Other'' Kessinger Publishing: Montana, 2005. p. 247. {{ISBN|1-4179-7462-1}}</ref> |
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M.K Bhasin's review article (referencing Mourant 1983) suggests that "The |
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Caucasoids and the Mongoloids almost certainly |
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became differentiated from one another |
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somewhere in Asia" and that "Another differentiation, which |
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probably took place in Asia, is that of the |
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Australoids, perhaps from a common type before |
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the separation of the Mongoloids." |
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<ref name="bhasin">{{cite journal|url=http://www.krepublishers.com/02-Journals/IJHG/IJHG-06-0-000-000-2006-Web/IJHG-06-3-177-280-2006-Abst-PDF/IJHG-06-3-233-274-2006-000-Bhasin-M-K/IJHG-06-3-233-274-2006-000-Bhasin-M-K-Text.PDF|last=Bhasin|first=M.K.|title=Genetics of Caste and Tribes of India: Indian Population Milieu|journal=Int J Hum Genet|volume=6|issue=3|pages=244|year=2006|publisher=Kamla Raj|accessdate=2007-10-22}}</ref> |
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During the 19th century, diverging opinions were pronounced whether Native Americans or Malays should be included in the grouping which was sometimes called "Mongolian" and sometimes "Mongoloid". For example, D. M. Warren in 1856 used a narrow definition which did not include either the "Malay" or the "American" races,<ref>Warren, D.M. (1856). A System of Physical Geography. Philadelphia: H. Cowperthwait & Co. p. 77.</ref> while Huxley (1870)<ref>{{cite web |url=http://aleph0.clarku.edu/huxley/SM3/GeoDis.html |title=Huxley, Thomas, On the Geographical Distribution of the Chief Modifications of Mankind. 1870. August 14, 2006 |publisher=Aleph0.clarku.edu |access-date=2013-12-15}}</ref> and [[Alexander Winchell]] (1881) included both Malays and indigenous Americans.<ref>Winchell, A. (1881). Preadamites; or A Demonstration of the Existence of Men Before Adam; (3rd ed.). Chicago: S.C. Griggs and Company; London: Trubner & Co. pp. 57, 66.</ref> In 1861, [[Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire]] added the Australian as a secondary race (subrace) of the principal race of Mongolian.<ref name="Deniker">Deniker, Joseph. ''The Races of Man: An Outline of Anthropology and Ethnography'' C. Scribner's Sons: New York, 1900, p.282 {{ISBN|0-8369-5932-9}}</ref> |
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Dr. T. Tirado claims that "''many experts''" consider American Indians and East Asians to be descended from a "''Proto-Mongoloid''" population which existed as late as 12,000 years ago.<ref>Tirado, T. Millersville University. "When Worlds Collide." 2007. September 27, 2007. [http://www.millersville.edu/~columbus/papers/PEOPLE.CWK]</ref> |
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See also: [[Models of migration to the New World]] |
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In his ''Essai sur l'inégalité des races humaines'' (''Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races'', published 1853–55), which would later influence [[Adolf Hitler]], the French [[aristocrat]] [[Arthur de Gobineau]] defined three races which he called "white", "black", and "yellow". His "yellow race", corresponding to other writers' "Mongoloid race", consisted of "the Altaic, Mongol, Finnish and Tartar branches".<ref name="Gob">{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/inequalityhuman00gobigoog |year=1915 |publisher=Putnam |last=Gobineau |first=Arthur |title=The Inequality of Human Races |access-date=2007-10-18|page=146|isbn=978-0-86527-430-3}}</ref><ref name="anthroGob">DiPiero, Thomas. ''White Men Aren't'' gid/s work Duke University Press, 2002, p.8 {{ISBN|0-8223-2961-1}}</ref> While he saw the "white race" as superior, he claimed that the "yellow race" was physically and intellectually mediocre but had an extremely strong materialism that allowed them to achieve certain results.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Blue |first=Gregory |title=Gobineau on China: Race Theory, the "Yellow Peril" and the Critique of Modernity" |journal=[[Journal of World History]] |volume=10 |issue=1 |pages=93–139 | year=1999 |jstor=20078751 |doi=10.1353/jwh.2005.0003 |s2cid=143762514 }}</ref>{{rp|100}} |
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Futuyma believes the Mongoloid race "''diverged 41,000 years ago''" from a Mongoloid and Caucasoid group which diverged from Negroids "''110,000 years ago''".<!--p.522--><ref name=Futuyma /> |
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{{MeyersLexikonEthnographicMap}} |
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Peter Brown (1999) evaluates three sites with early East Asian [[modern human]] skeletal remains (Liujiang, [[Liuzhou]], [[Guangxi]], China; [[Zhoukoudian]]'s Upper Cave; and Minatogawa in [[Okinawa]]) dated to between 10,175 to 33,200 years ago, and finds lack of support for the conventional designation of skeletons from this period as "''Proto-Mongoloid''"; this would make [[Neolithic]] sites 5500 to 7000 years ago (e.g. [[Banpo]]) the oldest known Mongoloid remains in East Asia, younger than some in the Americas. He concludes that the origin of the Mongoloid [[phenotype]] remains unknown, and could even lie in the New World.<ref>{{cite web|author=Peter Brown|institution=Department of Anthropology and Paleoanthropology, University of New England|title="The First Modern East Asians? another Look at Upper Cave 101, Liujiang, and Minatogawa|year=1999|lastaccess= 2007-09-23|url=http://www-personal.une.edu.au/~pbrown3/brown99.pdf|work=K. Omoto (ed.) Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Origins of the Japanese, International Research Center for Japanese Studies: Kyoto.|pages=pp. 105-130}}</ref> |
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According to the [[Meyers Konversations-Lexikon]] (1885–90), peoples included in the Mongoloid race are [[Indigenous peoples of Siberia|North Mongol]], [[Chinese people|Chinese]] and [[Indochina|Indochinese]], [[Japanese people|Japanese]] and [[Koreans|Korean]], [[Tibetan people|Tibetan]] and [[Bamar people|Burmese]], [[Malay race|Malay]], [[Polynesians|Polynesian]], [[Māori people|Maori]], [[Micronesia]]n, [[Eskimo]], and [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native American]].<ref>''[[Meyers Konversations-Lexikon]]'', 4th ed., 1885–90.</ref> |
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In 1909, a map published based on racial classifications in South Asia conceived by [[Herbert Hope Risley]] classified inhabitants of [[Bengal]] and parts of [[Odisha]] as ''Mongolo-Dravidians'', people of mixed Mongoloid and [[Dravidian people|Dravidian]] origin.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PwNkQgAACAAJ |title=The Concept of Race in South Asia |first=Peter |last=Robb |date= 1997 |publisher=Oxford University Press |via=Google Books |isbn=978-0-19-564268-1}}</ref> Similarly in 1904, [[Ponnambalam Arunachalam]] claimed the [[Sinhalese people]] of [[Sri Lanka]] were a people of mixed ''Mongolian'' and ''[[Malay race|Malay]]'' racial origins as well as ''[[Indo-Aryan peoples|Indo-Aryan]]'', ''Dravidian'' and [[Vedda]] origins.<ref>Schubert, Stefan Andi (2016). ''[http://krex.k-state.edu/dspace/bitstream/handle/2097/32648/StefanSchubert2016.pdf?sequence=1 A Genealogy of an Ethnocratic Present: Rethinking Ethnicity after Sri Lanka's Civil War]''. {{page needed|date=March 2023}} MA thesis, Kansas State University.</ref> Howard S. Stoudt in ''The Physical Anthropology of Ceylon'' (1961) and [[Carleton S. Coon]] in ''The Living Races of Man'' (1966) classified the Sinhalese as partly Mongoloid.<ref name="The Physical Anthropology of Ceyl">{{cite journal |doi=10.1525/aa.1963.65.3.02a00260 |volume=65 |issue=3 |title=The Physical Anthropology of Ceylon. Howard W. Stoudt. |journal=American Anthropologist |pages=694–695 |year=1963 |last1=Angel |first1=J. Lawrence|doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qepKAAAAYAAJ |title=The living races of man |first1=Carleton Stevens |last1=Coon |first2=Edward E. |last2=Hunt |author1-link=Carleton S. Coon |author2-link=Edward Eyre Hunt Jr. |date=21 April 1966 |publisher=Cape |via=Google Books}}</ref> |
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A 2006 study of [[linkage disequilibrium]] finds that northern populations in East Asia started to expand in number between 34 and 22 thousand years ago ([[KYA]]), before the [[last glacial maximum]] at 21–18 KYA, while southern populations |
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started to expand between 18 and 12 KYA, but then grew faster, and suggests that the northern populations expanded earlier because they could exploit the abundant [[megafauna]] of the ‘‘[[Steppe-tundra|Mammoth Steppe]],’’ while the southern populations could increase in number only when a warmer and more stable climate led to more plentiful plant resources such as [[tuber]]s.<ref>{{cite web|title=Male Demography in East Asia: A North–South Contrast in Human Population Expansion Times|url=http://www.genetics.org/cgi/reprint/172/4/2431.pdf|publisher=Genetics Society of America|year=2006|doi=10.1534/genetics.105.054270|lastaccess=2007-09-29|author=Yali Xue,*,†,‡ Tatiana Zerjal,*,‡ Weidong Bao,‡,§ Suling Zhu,‡,§ Qunfang Shu,§ Jiujin Xu,§ Ruofu Du,§ Songbin Fu,† Pu Li,† Matthew E. Hurles,* Huanming Yang** and |
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Chris Tyler-Smith*,‡,1}}</ref> |
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German [[Physical anthropology|physical anthropologist]] [[Egon Freiherr von Eickstedt]], an influential proponent of ''Rassenkunde'' (racial studies) in [[Nazi Germany]], classified people from Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, East India, parts of Northeast India, western Myanmar and Sri Lanka as ''East Brachid'', referring to people of mixed ''Indid'' and ''South Mongolid'' origins.<ref>{{cite journal |jstor=29535004 |title=Die Indien-Expedition des Staatlichen Forschungsinstituts für Völkerkunde in Leipzig. 1. Anthropologischer Bericht |first=Egon Frhr. |last=von Eickstedt |date=21 April 2018 |journal=Anthropologischer Anzeiger |volume=4 |issue=3 |pages=208–219}}</ref> Eickstedt also classified the people of central Myanmar, Yunnan, southern Tibet, Thailand and parts of India as ''Palaungid'' deriving from the name of the [[Palaung people]] of Myanmar. He also classified the Burmese, Karen, Kachin, Shan, Sri Lankans, Tai, South Chinese, Munda and Juang, and others as having "mixed" with the ''Palaungid'' phenotype.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ykgRAQAAMAAJ |title=Rassenkunde und Rassengeschichte der Menschheit |first=Egon von |last=Eickstedt |date=21 April 2018 |publisher=F. Enke |via=Google Books}}</ref> |
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===Subraces=== |
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Bhavan identifies Northeast India Mongoloids to be a subrace called the "''Paleo-Mongoloid''", being the "''dominant element in the tribes living in [[Assam]] and the [[Burma|Indo-Burmese]] frontiers... [[Sikkim]] and [[Bhutan|Bhutan]]... [and] Tibetan mongoloids''"<ref name=Bhavan>Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan. <u>The Vedic Age</u>, Vol. 1 (S. Roma-Krishnan and Bhavan Bombay, India 1962) p. 151</ref> |
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Commenting on the situation of the United States in the early 20th century, [[Leonard Lieberman]] said that the notion of the whole world being composed of three distinct races, Caucasoid, Mongoloid, and Negroid, seemed credible because of the history of [[immigration to the United States]] with most immigrants coming from three areas, [[South Central China|Southeast China]], [[Northwestern Europe|Northwest Europe]], and [[West Africa]]. This made the point of view of three races appear to be "true, natural, and inescapable".<ref name="Lieberman1997">{{cite web|author=Lieberman, L.|author-link=Leonard Lieberman|year=1997|title="Race" 1997 and 2001: A Race Odyssey|publisher=[[American Anthropological Association]]|page=2|url=http://s3.amazonaws.com/rdcms-aaa/files/production/public/FileDownloads/pdfs/cmtes/commissions/aec/upload/A_Race_Odyssey.pdf}}</ref> |
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In 1900, Joseph Deniker said, the "''Mongol race admits two varieties or subraces: Tunguse or Northern Mongolian... and Southern Mongolian''"<ref name=Deniker /><!--p.293--> The people of East Asia are called "''Northern Mongoloids''".<ref name=Ainu>Ainu Museum. "The Ainu People." 2007. September 26, 2007. [http://www.ainu-museum.or.jp/english/eng01.html]</ref> Archaeologist Peter Bellwood claims that the "''vast majority''" of people in Southeast Asia, the region he calls the "''clinal Mongoloid-Australoid zone''", are "''Southern Mongoloids''" but have a "''high degree''" of Australoid admixture. <!--p.89,92--><ref>Bellwood, Peter. <u>Pre-History of the Indo-malaysian Archipelago.</u> Australian National University:1985. ISBN 9781921313110</ref> [[Ainu people|Ainus]] are considered Southern Mongoloids even though they live in East Asia.<ref name=Ainu /> |
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[[Sinodonty and Sundadonty]] are dentition patterns that correspond to the Northern Mongoloid vs. Southern Mongoloid distinction. |
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In 1950, [[UNESCO]] published their statement ''[[The Race Question]]''. It condemned all forms of [[racism]], naming "the doctrine of ''inequality'' of men and races"<ref name="UNESCO1950">[http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0012/001282/128291eo.pdf "The Race Question"], UNESCO, 1950, 11pp</ref>{{rp|1}} among the causes of [[World War II]] and proposing to replace the term "race" with "ethnic groups" because "serious errors ... are habitually committed when the term 'race' is used in popular parlance".<ref name="UNESCO1950" />{{rp|6}} |
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==Features== |
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[[Image:YuanEmperorAlbumGenghisPortrait.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Genghis Khan]], the [[Khagan]] of the [[Mongol Empire]].]] |
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Forensic anthropologist Caroline Wilkenson says Mongoloids feature "''absent browridges''"<!--pg86-->.<ref name=Wilkenson>Wilkenson, Caroline. Forensic Facial Reconstruction. Cambridge University Press. 2004. ISBN:0521820030</ref> Skulls belonging to Asians and American Indians exhibit very forward-projecting malar bones and comparatively flat faces, more circular orbits than other groups, and a moderate nasal aperture with a slightly pointed lower margin.<ref>Quigley, Christine. <u>Skulls and Skeletons: Human Bone Collections and Accumulations. </u> McFarland: USA, 2001. ISBN 078641068X, 9780786410682 p.16</ref> Moreover, Mongoloid skulls are the most gracile in the human family. It is believed that the Mongoloid skull type is a very recent evolutionary development.<ref>Wade, Nicholas. <u>Before the Dawn. </u> Penguin Group: USA, 2006. ISBN 1594200793, 9781594200793 p.120</ref> "''The Mongoloid skull has proceeded further than in any other people.''"<!--pg. 13--><ref name=Montagu /> "''The Mongoloid skull, whether Chinese or Japanese, has been rather more [[neoteny|neotenized]] than the Caucasoid or European.''"<!--pg. 13--><ref name=Montagu /> "''The female skull, it will be noted, is more pedomorphic in all human populations than the male skull.''" <!--pg. 13--> <ref name=Montagu>Montagu, Ashley. Growing Young. Published by Greenwood Publishing Group, 1989 |
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ISBN 0897891678</ref> "''Mongoloid races are explained in terms of being the most extreme paedomorphic humans.''"<ref>Moxon, Steve. The Eternal Child: An Explosive New Theory of Human Origins and Behaviour by Clive Bromhall |
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Ebury Press, 2003. [http://www.human-nature.com/nibbs/03/moxon.html ]</ref> "''The intuition that advanced human development was paedomorphic rather than recapitulationary and accelerated was disturbing to many Eurocentric nineteenth century anthropologists.''"<!--pg 349 --><ref name=Grossinger /> "''If juvenilization was the characteristic for advanced status, then it was clear that the Mongoloid races were more deeply fetalized in most respects and thus capable of the greatest development.''"<!--pg 349--> <ref name=Grossinger>Grossinger, Richard. Embryogenesis. Published by North Atlantic Books, 2000 |
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ISBN 155643359X </ref> "''[R]elatively large-headed [is the] mongoloid''".<ref>Carnby. Carnby’s Physical Anthropology Website. Distribution of Bodily Characters. 2008. Accessed August 11, 2008. [http://carnby.altervista.org/troe/08-04.htm ]</ref> "''An interesting hypothesis put forward by paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould many years ago was that the package of the Mongoloid anatomical changes could be explained by the phenomenon of neoteny, whereby an infantile or childlike body form is preserved in adult life.<!--pg. 217--><ref name=Oppenheimer /> Neoteny in hominids is still one of the simplest explanations of how we developed a disproportionately large brain so rapidly over the past few million years.<!--pg. 217--><ref name=Oppenheimer /> The relatively large brain and the forward rotation of the skull on the spinal column, and body hair loss, both characteristic of humans, are found in foetal chimps.<!--pg. 217--><ref name=Oppenheimer /> Gould suggested a mild intensification of neoteny in Mongoloids, in whom it has been given the name paedomorphy.<!--pg. 217--><ref name=Oppenheimer /> Such a mechanism is likely to involve only a few controller genes and could therefore happen over a relatively short evolutionary period.<!--pg. 217--><ref name=Oppenheimer /> It would also explain how the counterintuitive retrousse [turned up at the end] nose and relative loss of facial hair got into the package.''"<!--pg. 217--><ref name=Oppenheimer>Oppenheimer, Stephen. <u>The Real Eve.</u> Published by Carroll & Graf Publishers, 2003 |
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ISBN 0786711922</ref> |
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"''[D]ecrease unnecessary muscle bulk, less tooth mass, thinner bones and smaller physical size;"<!--pg. 218--><ref name=Oppenheimer /> this follows the selective adaptive model of Mongoloid evolution.''""<!--pg. 218--><ref name=Oppenheimer /> In [[Ashley Montagu]]'s list of "''[n]eotenous structural traits in which Mongoloids... differ from Caucasoids''", Montagu lists "''Larger brain, larger braincase, broader skull, broader face, flat roof of the nose, inner eye fold, more protuberant eyes, lack of brow ridges, greater delicacy of bones, shallow mandibular fossa, small mastoid processes, stocky build, persistence of thymus gland into adult life, persistence of juvenile form of zygomatic muscle, persistence of juvenile form of superior lip muscle, later eruption of full dentition (except second and third molars), less hairy, fewer sweat glands, fewer hairs per square centimeter [and] long torso''"<!--pg 254--><ref name=Montagu /> "''Mongoloid subjects were found to have approximately 20% higher bone density at the angle of mandible than Caucasoid subjects.''"<ref>Ong. R.G. Evaluation of bone density in the mandibles of young Australian adults of Mongoloid and Caucasoid descent. PubMed. 1999. Accessed September 10, 2008. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10202474 ]</ref> |
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==== Subraces according to Kroeber ==== |
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The [[Mongolian spot]] is found in a great percentage of all Mongoloids, but is also found frequently in [[Negroid]]s, and infrequently in [[Caucasoid]]s. |
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[[A. L. Kroeber|Alfred L. Kroeber]] (1948), [[Emeritus]] Professor of Anthropology at the [[University of California, Berkeley]],<!--Kroeber's credentials are cited to the 1st sentence, of the upper-right paragraph above the two columns of text, on page 293, of the Kroeber (1955) source. The other statements are cited to Kroeber (1948).--> referring to the racial classification of humankind on the basis of physical features,<!--The 1st sentence, of the 2nd-to-last paragraph, of page 126, indicates that Kroeber's classification was of race and based on physical features.--> said that there are basically "three grand divisions."<!--This is in the 1st sentence, of the 2nd-to-last paragraph, of page 131. The word "basically" is a rewording of the Kroeber's phrase, "On the basic view."--> Kroeber indicated that, within the three-part classification, the Mongoloid, the [[Negroid]], and the [[Caucasian race|Caucasian]] are the three "primary racial stocks of mankind."<!--On page 133, the 1st sentence from the caption of Figure 6, said, "Outline distribution of the primary racial stocks of mankind according to the threefold classification." In the middle of Figure 6, the labels next to rectangles are: "NEGROID," "MONGOLOID," and "CAUCASIAN."--> Kroeber said that the following are the divisions of the Mongoloid stock: the "Mongolian proper of [[East Asia]]," the "[[Malay race|Malaysian]] of the [[East Indies]]," and the "[[indigenous peoples of the Americas|American Indian]]."<!--This is in the 1st sentence, of the last paragraph, of page 136.--> Kroeber alternatively referred to the divisions of the Mongoloid stock as the following: "Asiatic Mongoloids," "Oceanic Mongoloids," and "American Mongoloids."<!--In Figure 8, titled "RELATIONSHIP OF HUMAN RACES," on page 140, in the large, upper-right circle, Kroeber put small circles with the following terms inside of them: "American Indians," "Oceanic Mongoloids," and "Asiatic Mongoloids." In the last sentence, of the 2nd paragraph, of page 137, Kroeber said, "Among the American Mongoloids, the Eskimo appear to be the most particularized sub-variety, according to almost all anthropometrists."--> Kroeber said that the differences among the three divisions of the Mongoloid stock are not very large.<!--This is in the 2nd sentence, of the last paragraph, of page 136.--> Kroeber said that the Malaysian and the American Indian are generalized type peoples<!--This is in the 2nd and 3rd sentences, of the 1st paragraph, of page 137.--> while the Mongolian proper is the most extreme or pronounced form.<!--This is in the 3rd sentence, of the last paragraph, of page 136.--> Kroeber said that the original Mongoloid stock must be regarded as being more like the current Malaysians, the current American Indians, or an intermediate type between these two.<!--This is in the 2nd sentence, of the 1st paragraph, of page 137.--> Kroeber said that it is from these generalized type peoples, who kept more nearly the ancient type, that peoples such as the [[Chinese people|Chinese]] gradually [[Divergent evolution|diverged]], who added the [[epicanthic fold|oblique eye]], and a "certain generic refinement of physique."<!--This is in the 3rd sentence, of the 1st paragraph, of page 137.--> Kroeber said that, according to most [[Anthropometry|anthropometrists]], the [[Eskimo]] is the most particularized sub-variety out of the American Mongoloids.<!--This is in the last sentence, of the 2nd paragraph, of page 137.--> Kroeber said that in the East Indies, and in particular the [[Philippines]], there can at times be distinguished a less specifically Mongoloid strain, which has been called the "[[wikt:proto-|Proto-]]Malaysian," and a more specifically Mongoloid strain, which has been called the "[[wikt:deutero-|Deutero-]]Malaysian."<!--This is in the 1st sentence, of the 2nd paragraph, of page 137.--> Kroeber said that [[Polynesians]] appear to have primary Mongoloid connections by way of the Malaysians.<!--This is in the last sentence, of the 4th paragraph, of page 138.--> Kroeber said that the Mongoloid element of Polynesians is not a specialized Mongoloid.<!--This is in the 4th sentence, of the last paragraph, of page 139.--> Kroeber said that the Mongoloid element in Polynesians appears to be larger than the definite Caucasian strain in Polynesians.<!--This is in the 3rd and 4th sentences, of the last paragraph, of page 139.--> Speaking of Polynesians, Kroeber said that there are locally possible minor Negroid absorptions, as the ancestral Polynesians had to pass by or through [[archipelago]]es which are presently [[Indigenous people of New Guinea|Papuo-Melanesian]] Negroid to get to the central [[Pacific Ocean|Pacific]].<!--This is in the 2nd-to-last sentence, of the last paragraph, of page 139.--><ref>[[A. L. Kroeber|Kroeber, A.L.]] (1955). History of Anthropological Thought. ''Yearbook of Anthropology.'' [[University of Chicago Press]]. p. 293. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/3031151 Link].</ref><!--Kroeber's credentials are cited to Kroeber (1955). The other statements are cited to Kroeber (1948).--><ref>[[A. L. Kroeber|Kroeber, A.L.]] (1948). ''Anthropology: Race, Language, Culture, Psychology, Prehistory.'' [[New York City|New York]]: [[Harcourt (publisher)|Harcourt, Brace and Company]]. pp. 126, 131, 133, & 137–140. [https://archive.org/details/anthropologyrace00kroe/page/136 Link].</ref> |
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=== Coon's ''Origin of Races'' === |
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===Proto Mongoloids=== |
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American anthropologist [[Carleton S. Coon]] published his much debated<ref name="ways">{{cite journal| last = Jackson| first = John Jr.| title="In Ways Unacademical": The Reception of Carleton S. Coon's The Origin of Races| journal = Journal of the History of Biology| volume = 34| issue = 2| pages = 247–285|date=June 2001| doi = 10.1023/A:1010366015968 | jstor=4331661| s2cid = 86739986}}</ref>{{rp|248}} ''Origin of Races'' in 1962. Coon divided the species ''[[Homo sapiens]]'' into five groups: Besides the ''Caucasoid'', ''Mongoloid'', and ''[[Australoid]]'' races, he posited two races among the indigenous populations of sub-Saharan Africa: the ''[[Capoid race]]'' in the south and the ''Congoid race''. |
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The physical features of the "''Proto-Mongoloid''" were characterized as, "''a straight-haired type, medium in complexion, jaw protrusion, nose-breadth, and inclining probably to round-headedness''".<ref>Worthington, Elsie. <u>North American Indian Life: Customs and Traditions of 23 Tribes</u> University of Nebraska Press: USA, 1967. ISBN 0-48627-377-6 p. 7</ref> Kanzō Umehara considers the [[Ainu people|Ainu]] and [[Ryukyuan people|Ryukyuans]] to have "''preserved their proto-Mongoloid traits''". <ref>Sleeboom, Margaret. <u>Academic Nations in China and Japan.</u> Routledge: UK, 2004. ISBN 0-41531-545-X p.56</ref> |
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Coon's thesis was that ''[[Homo erectus]]'' had already been divided into five different races or subspecies. "''Homo Erectus'' then evolved into ''Homo Sapiens'' not once but five times, as each subspecies, living in its own territory, passed a critical threshold from a more brutal to a more ''sapient'' state."<ref>Cited according to {{cite journal| last = Jackson| first = John Jr.| title="In Ways Unacademical": The Reception of Carleton S. Coon's The Origin of Races| journal = Journal of the History of Biology| volume = 34| issue = 2| page = 248|date=June 2001| doi = 10.1023/A:1010366015968 | jstor=4331661| s2cid = 86739986}} The reference given there is to "Coon, ''Origin of the'' [sic] ''Races'', 1963 [sic], p. 657".</ref> |
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Since Coon followed the traditional methods of physical anthropology, relying on morphological characteristics, and not on the emerging [[genetics]] to classify humans, the debate over ''Origin of Races'' has been "viewed as the last gasp of an outdated scientific methodology that was soon to be supplanted."<ref name="ways" />{{rp|249}}<ref>For a criticism of Coon's relying on typology alone, see also: {{cite web |url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/first/gill.html |title=Does Race Exist? A proponent's perspective |first=George W. |last=Gill |publisher=Pbs.org|year=2000}}</ref> |
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=== Disproof by modern genetics === |
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==Usage== |
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The fact that there are no sharp distinctions between the supposed racial groups had been observed by Blumenbach and later by [[Charles Darwin]].<ref>"It may be doubted whether any character can be named which is distinctive of a race and is constant... they graduate into each other, and.. it is hardly possible to discover clear distinctive characters between them... As it is improbable that the numerous and unimportant points of resemblance between the several races of man in bodily structure and mental faculties (I do not here refer to similar customs) should all have been independently acquired, they must have been inherited from progenitors who had these same characters.", Charles Darwin, [http://darwin-online.org.uk/content/frameset?itemID=F937.1&viewtype=text&pageseq=238 ''The Descent of Man'' p. 225 onwards]</ref> |
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===Questionable usefulness=== |
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Geneticist [[Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza]] claims that there is a genetic division between [[East Asia|East]] and [[Southeast Asia]]ns.<ref>[http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/95/20/11501 The Chinese Human Genome Diversity Project, L. Luca Cavalli-Sforza]</ref> In a like manner, Zhou Jixu agrees that there is a physical difference between these two populations.<ref>http://sino-platonic.org/complete/spp175_chinese_civilization_agriculture.pdf |
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The Rise of Agricultural Civilization in China, Sino-Platonic Papers 175, Zhou Jixu, citing Ho Ping-ti, ISBN 0226345246</ref> Other geneticists have found evidence for three separate populations, carrying distinct sets of non-recombining [[Y chromosome]] lineages, within the traditional Mongoloid category: North Asians, Han Chinese/Southeast Asians, and Japanese.<ref>TAJIMA Atsushi, PAN I.-Hung, FUCHAROEN Goonnapa, FUCHAROEN Supan, MATSUO Masafumi, TOKUNAGA Katsushi, JUJI Takeo, HAYAMI Masanori, OMOTO Keiichi, HORAI Satoshi, "Three major lineages of Asian Y chromosomes: implications for the peopling of east and southeast Asia," ''Human Genetics'' 2002, vol. 110, no1, pp. 80-88</ref> The complexity of genetic data have led to doubt about the usefulness of the concept of a Mongoloid race itself, since distinctive East Asian features may represent separate lineages and arise from environmental adaptations or retention of common proto-Eurasian ancestral characteristics.<ref>Encyclopedia Britannica, Mongoloid</ref> Many scholars claim [[Austronesian peoples|Austronesian]]s are admixtures of [[Australoid]]s (a group which includes [[Vedda people|Veddoid]]s, [[Indigenous Australians|Australians]], [[Negrito]]s, and [[Papuans]]) with Mongoloids.<ref>[http://www.geocities.com/Tokyo/Temple/9845/austro.htm Austronesian Navigation and Migration]</ref> |
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With the availability of new data due to the development of modern genetics, the concept of races in a biological sense has become untenable. Problems of the concept include: It "is not useful or necessary in research",<ref name="Lieberman1997" /> scientists are not able to agree on the definition of a certain proposed race, and they do not even agree on the number of races, with some proponents of the concept suggesting 300 or even more "races".<ref name="Lieberman1997" /> Also, data are not reconcilable with the concept of a treelike evolution<ref>"Indeed, if a species has sufficient gene flow, there can be no evolutionary tree of populations, because there are no population splits...", Templeton, A. (2016). Evolution and Notions of Human Race. In Losos J. & Lenski R. (Eds.), ''How Evolution Shapes Our Lives: Essays on Biology and Society'' (p. 355). Princeton; Oxford: Princeton University Press. {{doi|10.2307/j.ctv7h0s6j.26}}.</ref> nor with the concept of "biologically discrete, isolated, or static" populations.<ref name="AAPARace" /> |
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The concept's existence is based on a now disputed typological method of racial classification,<ref>O'Neil, Dennis. Palomar College. "Biological Anthropology Terms." 2006. [[May 13]], [[2007]]. [http://anthro.palomar.edu/tutorials/pglossary.htm]</ref><ref>http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/first/gill.html Does Race Exist? A proponent's perspective by George W. Gill.</ref> and the word is today practically absent in professional anthropology discussion. All the ''-oid'' racial terms (e.g. Mongoloid, Caucasoid, Negroid, etc.) are now often controversial in both technical and non-technical contexts and may sometimes give offense no matter how they are used.<ref>American Heritage Book of English Usage. Houghton Mifflin Company. 1996. <http://www.bartleby.com/64/C006/046.html#MONGOLOID>.</ref> This is especially true of "Mongoloid" because it has also been used as a synonym for persons with [[Down Syndrome]], and in [[American English]] as a generic insult meaning "idiot".<ref>[http://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=945 Down Syndrome Was Not Discovered By Dr. Down]</ref> Contrary to popular beliefs, Mongoloid refers to diverse ethnical groups, and not of a homogeneous group. |
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=== Current scientific consensus === |
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===Down's Syndrome=== |
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{{See also|Race and genetics}} |
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Since people with [[Down syndrome]] may have [[epicanthic fold]]s, the condition was widely called "Mongol" or "Mongoloid Idiocy"<ref>http://www.down-syndrome.info/library/periodicals/dsrp/06/1/019/DSRP-06-1-019-EN-GB.htm Ward, Connor O. John Langson Down the man and the message. 2006. [[August 26]], [[2006]]]</ref> [[John Langdon Down]], for whom the syndrome was named, claimed in his book ''Observations on the Ethnic Classification of Idiots '' (1866), that the Mongol-like features represented an evolutionary [[degeneration]] when manifested in [[Caucasoid]]s. The use of the term "Mongoloid" for racial purposes has therefore acquired negative connotations because of the connection with Down syndrome. |
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After discussing various criteria used in biology to define subspecies or races, [[Alan R. Templeton]] concludes in 2016: "[T]he answer to the question whether races exist in humans is clear and unambiguous: no."<ref name="Templeton2016">Templeton, A. (2016). Evolution and Notions of Human Race. In Losos J. & Lenski R. (Eds.), ''How Evolution Shapes Our Lives: Essays on Biology and Society'' (pp. 346–361). Princeton; Oxford: Princeton University Press. {{doi|10.2307/j.ctv7h0s6j.26}}. That this view reflects the consensus among American anthropologists is stated in: {{cite journal|last2=Yu|first2=Joon-Ho|last3=Ifekwunigwe|first3=Jayne O.|last4=Harrell|first4=Tanya M.|last5=Bamshad|first5=Michael J.|last6=Royal|first6=Charmaine D.|date=February 2017|title=Anthropologists' views on race, ancestry, and genetics|journal=American Journal of Physical Anthropology|volume=162|issue=2|pages=318–327|doi=10.1002/ajpa.23120|pmid=27874171|last1=Wagner|first1=Jennifer K.|pmc=5299519}} See also: {{cite web|author=American Association of Physical Anthropologists|author-link=American Association of Physical Anthropologists|title=AAPA Statement on Race and Racism |website=American Association of Physical Anthropologists|access-date=19 June 2020 |date=27 March 2019 |url=https://physanth.org/about/position-statements/aapa-statement-race-and-racism-2019/}}</ref>{{rp|360}} |
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== |
== Features == |
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=== General appearance === |
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*[[Craniofacial anthropometry]] |
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[[File:The races of man, figure 18 (IA deniofmanoutlinraces00rich).png|thumb|A drawing of a [[Epicanthic fold|"Mongoloid" eye]] according to French anthropologist [[Joseph Deniker]], showing a [[Kalmyks|Kalmyk]].]] |
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*[[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native Americans]] |
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The last edition of the German encyclopedia [[Meyers Konversations-Lexikon]] (1971–79, 25 volumes) lists the following characteristics of the "Mongoloid" populations of Asia: "Flat face with a low nasal root, accentuated [[zygomatic bone|zygomatic arches]], flat-lying eyelids (which are often slanting), thick, tight, dark hair, dark eyes, yellow-brownish skin, usually short, stocky build."<ref>{{Cite encyclopedia|title=Meyers Enzyklopädisches Lexikon in 25 Bänden. Neunte, völlig neu bearbeitete Auflage zum 150jährigen Bestehen des Verlages|article=Anthropologie|volume=2|page=308|language=de|quote=flaches Gesicht mit niedriger Nasenwurzel, betonte Jochbogen, flachliegende Lidspalte (die oft schräggestellt ist), dickes, straffes, dunkles Haar, dunkle Augen, gelbbräunl. Haut, in der Regel kurzer, untersetzter Wuchs}}</ref> |
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*[[Malagasy people]] |
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*[[Eurasian (mixed ancestry)]] |
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== |
=== Skull === |
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{{reflist|2}} |
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In 2004, British anthropologist [[Caroline Wilkinson]] gave a description of "Mongoloid" skulls in her book on [[forensic facial reconstruction]]: "The Mongoloid skull shows a round head shape with a medium-width nasal aperture, rounded orbital margins, massive cheekbones, weak or absent [[canine fossa]]e, moderate prognathism, absent brow ridges, simple cranial sutures, prominent zygomatic bones, broad, flat, tented nasal root, short nasal spine, shovel-shaped upper incisor teeth (scooped out behind), straight nasal profile, moderately wide palate shape, arched sagittal contour, wide facial breadth and a flatter face."<ref>{{cite book|author=Caroline Wilkinson|title=Forensic Facial Reconstruction|year=2004|page=86|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=0-521-82003-0}}</ref> |
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</br> |
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[[Category:Race (historical definitions)]] |
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=== Cold adaptation === |
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[[cs:Mongoloidní rasa]] |
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In 1950, [[Carleton S. Coon]], [[Stanley M. Garn]], and [[Joseph Birdsell|Joseph B. Birdsell]] proposed that the relative flatness of "Mongoloid" faces was caused by adaption to the extreme cold of subarctic and arctic conditions.<ref name="Dahlberg" />{{rp|132}}<ref name="So" />{{rp|66}} They supposed that "Mongoloid" eye sockets have been extended vertically to make room for adipose tissue around the eyeballs, and that the "''reduced''" brow ridges decrease the size of the air spaces inside of the brow ridges known as the [[frontal sinus]]es which are "''vulnerable''" to the cold.<!--The source text stated that the sinuses were "vulnerable", but it did not explicitly state that they were "vulnerable" to the cold. However, the context of the paragraph which was about Mongoloid faces being cold adapted indicated that the word "vulnerable" referred to the cold. The source text implied that smaller brow ridges contain smaller frontal sinuses, but it did not explicitly state this in the source text's sentence "Brow ridges, with their vulnerable sinuses, are reduced".--> They also supposed that "Mongoloid" facial features reduce the surface area of the nose by having nasal bones that are flat against the face and having enlarged cheekbones that project forward which effectively reduce the external projection of the nose.<ref name="Dahlberg">{{cite book |last1=Dahlberg |first1=A.A. |last2=Graber |first2=T.M. |title=Orofacial growth and development |date=1977 |publisher=Mouton |location=The Hague |isbn=9789027978899 |pages=132, 147, 148 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=j3X3SLzDNv0C&pg=PA132 |doi=10.1515/9783110807554}}</ref> |
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[[de:Mongolide]] |
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[[es:Mongoloide]] |
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Still, in 1965 a study by A. T. Steegmann showed that the so-called cold-adapted Mongoloid face provided no greater protection against frostbite than the facial structure of Europeans.<ref name="So">{{cite journal|author=Joseph K. So|title=Human Biological Adaptation to Arctic and Subarctic Zones|journal=Annual Review of Anthropology|volume=9|year=1980|pages=63–82|doi=10.1146/annurev.an.09.100180.000431|jstor=2155729}}</ref>{{rp|66}} |
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[[fa:نژاد زرد]] |
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[[fr:Population de couleur jaune]] |
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== Use in United States law == |
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[[id:Ras Mongoloid]] |
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{{Cleanup|date=November 2024|reason=this section is written in [[Wikipedia:Proseline | proseline]].|section}} |
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[[it:Mongoloide]] |
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In 1858, the [[California State Legislature]] enacted the first bill of several that [[School segregation in the United States|prohibited the attendance]] of "[[Negro]]es, Mongolians and [[Native Americans in the United States|Indians]]" from [[state school|public schools]].<!--This information is located in page 115.--><ref name="TamingTheElephant">Burns, John F. & Orsi, Richard J. (2003). ''Taming the Elephant: Politics, Government, and Law in Pioneer California.'' [[Berkeley, California|Berkeley]] & [[Los Angeles]]: [[University of California Press]]. Pages 115 & 116. [https://books.google.com/books?id=y-ucusuLPOQC&pg=PA115 Google Books link].</ref> |
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[[lt:Mongolidai]] |
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[[mk:Монголоидна раса]] |
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In 1885, the California State Legislature amended its code to make [[School segregation in the United States|separate schools]] for "children of Mongoloid or [[Chinese Americans|Chinese]] descent."<!--This information is located in the second-to-last sentence of the first paragraph of page 116. The date "1885" is the date 1880 "five years later."--><ref name="TamingTheElephant" /> |
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[[ja:モンゴロイド]] |
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[[pl:Żółta rasa człowieka]] |
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In 1911, the [[Immigration and Naturalization Service|Bureau of Immigration and Naturalization]] was using the term "Mongolic grand division," not only to include [[Mongols]], but "in the widest sense of all," to include [[Malays (ethnic group)|Malays]], [[Chinese people|Chinese]], [[Japanese people|Japanese]], and [[Koreans]].<!--This information is in the last and 2nd-to-last sentences of the 5th paragraph of page 256. The 2nd-to-last sentence of that paragraph talks about the usage of the term "Mongolian" in a more restricted sense to mean "Mongol."--> In 1911, the Bureau of Immigration and Naturalization was placing all "East Indians," a term which included the peoples of "[[India]], [[Farther India]], and [[Malaysia]]," in the "Mongolic" grand division.<!--All East Indians being placed in the Mongolic grand division is in the last sentence, of the 2nd-to-last paragraph, of page 233. The people included in the term "East Indian" is indicated in the 2nd sentence, of the 6th paragraph, of page 233.--><ref>[[William P. Dillingham|Dillingham, William P.]] (1911). ''Reports of the [[United States Congress Joint Immigration Commission|Immigration Commission]]: Abstracts of Reports of the Immigration Commission.'' [[Washington, D.C.|Washington]]: [[United States Government Publishing Office|Government Printing Office]]. Pages 233 & 256. [https://books.google.com/books?id=XdtGAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA256 Google Books link].</ref> |
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[[pt:Amarelos]] |
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[[ru:Монголоидная раса]] |
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In 1985, Michael P. Malone of the [[FBI Laboratory]]<!--Information about Michael P. Malone is on page v (Roman numeral 5), which is page 5/205 of the PDF document.--> said that the FBI Laboratory is in a good position for the examination of Mongoloid hairs, because it does most of the examinations for [[Alaska]], which has a [[Alaska Natives|large Mongoloid population]], and it conducts examinations for the majority of [[Indian reservation]]s in the United States.<!--This information is in the 4th paragraph, of the right column, of page 112, which is page 112/205 of the PDF document.--><ref>''Proceedings of the International Symposium on Forensic Hair Comparisons.'' (1985). Host Laboratory Division [[Federal Bureau of Investigation]]. Pages v ([[Roman numerals|Roman numeral]] 5) & 112. [https://web.archive.org/web/20190718030005/https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/Digitization/116592NCJRS.pdf Wayback Machine link].</ref> |
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[[sk:Mongoloidná rasa]] |
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[[fi:Mongolidi]] |
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In 1987, a report to the [[National Institute of Justice]]<!--This information is in the title page, page 1/127 of the PDF document.--> indicated that the following skeletal collections were of the "Mongoloid" "[[Ethnic group|Ethnic Group]]": Arctic [[Eskimo]], Prehistoric [[North American Indian]], [[Genetic and anthropometric studies on Japanese people|Japanese]], and Chinese.<!--This information is in the data table on page 4, which is page 13/127 of the PDF document.--><ref>Jantz, R.L. & Moore-Jansen, P.H. (1987). ''A Data Base for Forensic Anthropology: Final Report to the [[National Institute of Justice]].'' [[National Criminal Justice Reference Service]]. Title Page & Page 4. [https://web.archive.org/web/20190718062327/https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/111608.pdf Wayback Machine link].</ref> |
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[[sv:Mongolider]] |
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[[th:มองโกลอยด์]] |
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In 2005, an [[Scientific article|article]] in a [[Academic journal|journal]] by the [[FBI Laboratory]] defined the term "Mongoloid," as the term is used in [[Forensic anthropology|forensic]] hair examinations. It defined the term as, "an [[Anthropology|anthropological]] term designating one of the major groups of human beings originating from [[Asia]], excluding the [[Indian subcontinent]] and including [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native American Indians]]."<!--The web page is an article in the journal, "Forensic Science Communications." The sentence under bold-text "3. Terminology" explains that the following terms are "defined by how they are used in forensic hair examinations." The terms are listed alphabetically, so the definition for "Mongoloid" is listed in the M section.--><ref>Scientific Working Group on Materials Analysis (SWGMAT). (2005). Forensic Human Hair Examination Guidelines. ''Forensic Science Communications, (7)''2.[https://web.archive.org/web/20190729184047/https://archives.fbi.gov/archives/about-us/lab/forensic-science-communications/fsc/april2005/standards/2005_04_standards02.htm Wayback Machine link].</ref><!--In the 1st sentence, of the 1st paragraph, of the "About FSC" citation it says that "Forensic Science Communications" is a journal by the FBI Laboratory.--><ref>About FSC. (n.d.). The FBI Federal Bureau of Investigation. [https://web.archive.org/web/20190730080701/https://archives.fbi.gov/archives/about-us/lab/forensic-science-communications/aboutfsc.html Wayback Machine link].</ref> |
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[[vi:Đại chủng Á]] |
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[[uk:Монголоїдна раса]] |
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== Use as a term for Down syndrome == |
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[[zh:黃色人種]] |
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{{Main|Mongolian idiocy}} |
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"Mongoloid" has had a second usage, now generally avoided as highly offensive: until the late 20th century, people with [[Down syndrome]]<ref name="Smay and Armelagos" /><ref name="Lieberman" /><ref name="Templeton" /><ref name="Keevak" /> were often referred to as "Mongoloids", or in terms of "[[Mongolian idiocy]]" or "Mongolian imbecility". The term was motivated by the observation that people with Down syndrome often have [[epicanthic fold]]s.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.down-syndrome.info/library/periodicals/dsrp/06/1/019/DSRP-06-1-019-EN-GB.htm |author=Ward, Connor O. John Langdon |title=Down the man and the message |year=2006 |publisher=Down-syndrome.info |access-date=2013-12-02 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060902102759/http://www.down-syndrome.info/library/periodicals/dsrp/06/1/019/DSRP-06-1-019-EN-GB.htm |archive-date=2006-09-02 |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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Coined in 1908, the term remained in medical usage until the 1950s. In 1961, its use was deprecated by a group of genetic experts in an article in ''[[The Lancet]]'' due to its "misleading connotations".<ref>"The importance of this anomaly among Europeans and their descendants is not related to the segregation of genes derived from Asians; its appearance among members of Asian populations suggests such ambiguous designations as 'Mongol Mongoloid'; increasing participation of Chinese and Japanese in investigation of the condition imposes on them the use of an embarrassing term. We urge, therefore, that the expressions which imply a racial aspect of the condition be no longer used. Some of the undersigned are inclined to replace the term Mongolism by such designations as 'Langdon Down Anomaly', or 'Down's Syndrome or Anomaly', or 'Congenital Acromicria'. Several of us believe that this is an appropriate time to introduce the term 'Trisomy 21 Anomaly', which would include cases of simple Trisomy as well as translocations. It is hoped that agreement on a specific phrase will soon crystallise once the term 'Mongolism' has been abandoned." |
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Allen, G. Benda C.J. et al (1961). Lancet corr. 1, 775.</ref> The term continued to be used as a [[pejorative]] in the second half of the 20th century, with shortened versions such as ''mong'' in slang usage.<ref>{{cite news |title=Ricky Gervais, please stop using the word 'mong' |url=https://www.theguardian.com/society/joepublic/2011/oct/19/ricky-gervais-mong-twitter |work=The Guardian |access-date=26 May 2012 |location=London |first=Nicola |last=Clark |date=October 19, 2011}}</ref> |
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In the 21st century, this usage of the term is deemed "unacceptable" in the English-speaking world and has fallen out of common use<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Rodríguez-Hernández|first1=M. Luisa|last2=Montoya|first2=Eladio|date=2011-07-30|title=Fifty years of evolution of the term Down's syndrome|journal=Lancet|volume=378|issue=9789|pages=402|doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(11)61212-9|issn=1474-547X|pmid=21803206|s2cid=8541289}}</ref> because of its offensive and misleading implications. The terminology change was brought about both by scientific and medical experts<ref name="Ward1999">{{cite journal|last1=Ward|first1=O Conor|title=John Langdon Down: The Man and the Message|journal=Down Syndrome Research and Practice|url=https://library.down-syndrome.org/en-us/research-practice/06/1/john-langdon-down-man-message/|volume=6|issue=1|year=1999|pages=19–24|issn=0968-7912|doi=10.3104/perspectives.94|doi-access=free|pmid=10890244}}</ref> as well as people of Asian ancestry,<ref name="Ward1999" /> including those from Mongolia.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Howard-Jones|first=Norman|year=1979|title=On the diagnostic term "Down's disease"|journal=Medical History|volume=23|issue=1|pages=102–04|doi=10.1017/s0025727300051048|pmc=1082401|pmid=153994}}</ref> |
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== See also == |
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* [[Craniofacial anthropometry]] |
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* [[Orientalism]] |
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* [[Proto-Mongoloid]] |
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* [[Race (human categorization)]] |
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* [[Race and genetics]] |
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== References == |
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{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}} |
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== External links == |
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* {{Wiktionary-inline}} |
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{{Historical definitions of race}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Mongoloid race}} |
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[[Category:Pseudoscience]] |
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[[Category:Biological anthropology]] |
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[[Category:Historical definitions of race]] |
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[[Category:Anti-Asian slurs]] |
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[[Category:Pejorative terms for people with disabilities]] |
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[[Category:Slurs related to low intelligence]] |
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[[Category:Pejorative demonyms]] |
Latest revision as of 17:02, 11 December 2024
Mongoloid (/ˈmɒŋɡəˌlɔɪd/)[1] is an obsolete racial grouping of various peoples indigenous to large parts of Asia, the Americas, and some regions in Europe and Oceania. The term is derived from a now-disproven theory of biological race.[2] In the past, other terms such as "Mongolian race", "yellow", "Asiatic" and "Oriental" have been used as synonyms.
The concept of dividing humankind into the Mongoloid, Caucasoid, and Negroid races was introduced in the 1780s by members of the Göttingen school of history. It was further developed by Western scholars in the context of racist ideologies during the age of colonialism.[3] With the rise of modern genetics, the concept of distinct human races in a biological sense has become obsolete. In 2019, the American Association of Biological Anthropologists stated: "The belief in 'races' as natural aspects of human biology, and the structures of inequality (racism) that emerge from such beliefs, are among the most damaging elements in the human experience both today and in the past."[3]
The term Mongoloid has had a second usage referencing people with Down syndrome, now generally regarded as highly offensive.[4][5][6][7] Those affected were often referred to as "Mongoloids" or in terms of "Mongolian idiocy" or "Mongolian imbecility".
History of the concept
[edit]Origins
[edit]Mongolian as a term for race was first introduced in 1785 by Christoph Meiners, a scholar at the then modern Göttingen University. Meiners divided humanity into two races he labeled "Tartar-Caucasians" and "Mongolians", believing the former to be beautiful, the latter to be "weak in body and spirit, bad, and lacking in virtue".[8]: 34
His more influential Göttingen colleague Johann Friedrich Blumenbach borrowed the term Mongolian for his division of humanity into five races in the revised 1795 edition of his De generis humani varietate nativa (On the Natural Variety of Mankind). Although Blumenbach's concept of five races later gave rise to scientific racism, his arguments were basically anti-racist,[9] since he underlined that humankind as a whole forms one single species,[10] and points out that the transition from one race to another is so gradual that the distinctions between the races presented by him are "very arbitrary".[11] In Blumenbach's concept, the Mongolian race comprises the peoples living in Asia east of the Ob River, the Caspian Sea and the Ganges River, with the exception of the Malays, who are considered to be transitional between Caucasian and Ethiopian.[12] Of peoples living outside Asia, he includes the "Eskimos" in northern America and the European Finns, among whom he includes the "Lapps".[13]
In the context of scientific racism
[edit]Discussions on race among Western scholars during the 19th century took place against the background of the debate between monogenists and polygenists, the former arguing for a single origin of all humankind, the latter holding that each human race had a specific origin. Monogenists based their arguments either on a literal interpretation of the biblical story of Adam and Eve or on secular research. Since polygenism stressed the perceived differences, it was popular among white supremacists, especially slaveholders in the US.[15]
British biologist Thomas Huxley, a strong advocate of Darwinism and a monogenist, presented the views of polygenists in 1865: "[S]ome imagine their assumed species of mankind were created where we find them... the Mongolians from the Orangs".[16]
During the 19th century, diverging opinions were pronounced whether Native Americans or Malays should be included in the grouping which was sometimes called "Mongolian" and sometimes "Mongoloid". For example, D. M. Warren in 1856 used a narrow definition which did not include either the "Malay" or the "American" races,[17] while Huxley (1870)[18] and Alexander Winchell (1881) included both Malays and indigenous Americans.[19] In 1861, Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire added the Australian as a secondary race (subrace) of the principal race of Mongolian.[20]
In his Essai sur l'inégalité des races humaines (Essay on the Inequality of the Human Races, published 1853–55), which would later influence Adolf Hitler, the French aristocrat Arthur de Gobineau defined three races which he called "white", "black", and "yellow". His "yellow race", corresponding to other writers' "Mongoloid race", consisted of "the Altaic, Mongol, Finnish and Tartar branches".[21][22] While he saw the "white race" as superior, he claimed that the "yellow race" was physically and intellectually mediocre but had an extremely strong materialism that allowed them to achieve certain results.[23]: 100
Caucasoid: Negroid: Uncertain: | Mongoloid: North Mongol |
According to the Meyers Konversations-Lexikon (1885–90), peoples included in the Mongoloid race are North Mongol, Chinese and Indochinese, Japanese and Korean, Tibetan and Burmese, Malay, Polynesian, Maori, Micronesian, Eskimo, and Native American.[24]
In 1909, a map published based on racial classifications in South Asia conceived by Herbert Hope Risley classified inhabitants of Bengal and parts of Odisha as Mongolo-Dravidians, people of mixed Mongoloid and Dravidian origin.[25] Similarly in 1904, Ponnambalam Arunachalam claimed the Sinhalese people of Sri Lanka were a people of mixed Mongolian and Malay racial origins as well as Indo-Aryan, Dravidian and Vedda origins.[26] Howard S. Stoudt in The Physical Anthropology of Ceylon (1961) and Carleton S. Coon in The Living Races of Man (1966) classified the Sinhalese as partly Mongoloid.[27][28]
German physical anthropologist Egon Freiherr von Eickstedt, an influential proponent of Rassenkunde (racial studies) in Nazi Germany, classified people from Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, East India, parts of Northeast India, western Myanmar and Sri Lanka as East Brachid, referring to people of mixed Indid and South Mongolid origins.[29] Eickstedt also classified the people of central Myanmar, Yunnan, southern Tibet, Thailand and parts of India as Palaungid deriving from the name of the Palaung people of Myanmar. He also classified the Burmese, Karen, Kachin, Shan, Sri Lankans, Tai, South Chinese, Munda and Juang, and others as having "mixed" with the Palaungid phenotype.[30]
Commenting on the situation of the United States in the early 20th century, Leonard Lieberman said that the notion of the whole world being composed of three distinct races, Caucasoid, Mongoloid, and Negroid, seemed credible because of the history of immigration to the United States with most immigrants coming from three areas, Southeast China, Northwest Europe, and West Africa. This made the point of view of three races appear to be "true, natural, and inescapable".[31]
In 1950, UNESCO published their statement The Race Question. It condemned all forms of racism, naming "the doctrine of inequality of men and races"[32]: 1 among the causes of World War II and proposing to replace the term "race" with "ethnic groups" because "serious errors ... are habitually committed when the term 'race' is used in popular parlance".[32]: 6
Subraces according to Kroeber
[edit]Alfred L. Kroeber (1948), Emeritus Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley, referring to the racial classification of humankind on the basis of physical features, said that there are basically "three grand divisions." Kroeber indicated that, within the three-part classification, the Mongoloid, the Negroid, and the Caucasian are the three "primary racial stocks of mankind." Kroeber said that the following are the divisions of the Mongoloid stock: the "Mongolian proper of East Asia," the "Malaysian of the East Indies," and the "American Indian." Kroeber alternatively referred to the divisions of the Mongoloid stock as the following: "Asiatic Mongoloids," "Oceanic Mongoloids," and "American Mongoloids." Kroeber said that the differences among the three divisions of the Mongoloid stock are not very large. Kroeber said that the Malaysian and the American Indian are generalized type peoples while the Mongolian proper is the most extreme or pronounced form. Kroeber said that the original Mongoloid stock must be regarded as being more like the current Malaysians, the current American Indians, or an intermediate type between these two. Kroeber said that it is from these generalized type peoples, who kept more nearly the ancient type, that peoples such as the Chinese gradually diverged, who added the oblique eye, and a "certain generic refinement of physique." Kroeber said that, according to most anthropometrists, the Eskimo is the most particularized sub-variety out of the American Mongoloids. Kroeber said that in the East Indies, and in particular the Philippines, there can at times be distinguished a less specifically Mongoloid strain, which has been called the "Proto-Malaysian," and a more specifically Mongoloid strain, which has been called the "Deutero-Malaysian." Kroeber said that Polynesians appear to have primary Mongoloid connections by way of the Malaysians. Kroeber said that the Mongoloid element of Polynesians is not a specialized Mongoloid. Kroeber said that the Mongoloid element in Polynesians appears to be larger than the definite Caucasian strain in Polynesians. Speaking of Polynesians, Kroeber said that there are locally possible minor Negroid absorptions, as the ancestral Polynesians had to pass by or through archipelagoes which are presently Papuo-Melanesian Negroid to get to the central Pacific.[33][34]
Coon's Origin of Races
[edit]American anthropologist Carleton S. Coon published his much debated[35]: 248 Origin of Races in 1962. Coon divided the species Homo sapiens into five groups: Besides the Caucasoid, Mongoloid, and Australoid races, he posited two races among the indigenous populations of sub-Saharan Africa: the Capoid race in the south and the Congoid race.
Coon's thesis was that Homo erectus had already been divided into five different races or subspecies. "Homo Erectus then evolved into Homo Sapiens not once but five times, as each subspecies, living in its own territory, passed a critical threshold from a more brutal to a more sapient state."[36]
Since Coon followed the traditional methods of physical anthropology, relying on morphological characteristics, and not on the emerging genetics to classify humans, the debate over Origin of Races has been "viewed as the last gasp of an outdated scientific methodology that was soon to be supplanted."[35]: 249 [37]
Disproof by modern genetics
[edit]The fact that there are no sharp distinctions between the supposed racial groups had been observed by Blumenbach and later by Charles Darwin.[38]
With the availability of new data due to the development of modern genetics, the concept of races in a biological sense has become untenable. Problems of the concept include: It "is not useful or necessary in research",[31] scientists are not able to agree on the definition of a certain proposed race, and they do not even agree on the number of races, with some proponents of the concept suggesting 300 or even more "races".[31] Also, data are not reconcilable with the concept of a treelike evolution[39] nor with the concept of "biologically discrete, isolated, or static" populations.[3]
Current scientific consensus
[edit]After discussing various criteria used in biology to define subspecies or races, Alan R. Templeton concludes in 2016: "[T]he answer to the question whether races exist in humans is clear and unambiguous: no."[40]: 360
Features
[edit]General appearance
[edit]The last edition of the German encyclopedia Meyers Konversations-Lexikon (1971–79, 25 volumes) lists the following characteristics of the "Mongoloid" populations of Asia: "Flat face with a low nasal root, accentuated zygomatic arches, flat-lying eyelids (which are often slanting), thick, tight, dark hair, dark eyes, yellow-brownish skin, usually short, stocky build."[41]
Skull
[edit]In 2004, British anthropologist Caroline Wilkinson gave a description of "Mongoloid" skulls in her book on forensic facial reconstruction: "The Mongoloid skull shows a round head shape with a medium-width nasal aperture, rounded orbital margins, massive cheekbones, weak or absent canine fossae, moderate prognathism, absent brow ridges, simple cranial sutures, prominent zygomatic bones, broad, flat, tented nasal root, short nasal spine, shovel-shaped upper incisor teeth (scooped out behind), straight nasal profile, moderately wide palate shape, arched sagittal contour, wide facial breadth and a flatter face."[42]
Cold adaptation
[edit]In 1950, Carleton S. Coon, Stanley M. Garn, and Joseph B. Birdsell proposed that the relative flatness of "Mongoloid" faces was caused by adaption to the extreme cold of subarctic and arctic conditions.[43]: 132 [44]: 66 They supposed that "Mongoloid" eye sockets have been extended vertically to make room for adipose tissue around the eyeballs, and that the "reduced" brow ridges decrease the size of the air spaces inside of the brow ridges known as the frontal sinuses which are "vulnerable" to the cold. They also supposed that "Mongoloid" facial features reduce the surface area of the nose by having nasal bones that are flat against the face and having enlarged cheekbones that project forward which effectively reduce the external projection of the nose.[43]
Still, in 1965 a study by A. T. Steegmann showed that the so-called cold-adapted Mongoloid face provided no greater protection against frostbite than the facial structure of Europeans.[44]: 66
Use in United States law
[edit]This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: this section is written in proseline. (November 2024) |
In 1858, the California State Legislature enacted the first bill of several that prohibited the attendance of "Negroes, Mongolians and Indians" from public schools.[45]
In 1885, the California State Legislature amended its code to make separate schools for "children of Mongoloid or Chinese descent."[45]
In 1911, the Bureau of Immigration and Naturalization was using the term "Mongolic grand division," not only to include Mongols, but "in the widest sense of all," to include Malays, Chinese, Japanese, and Koreans. In 1911, the Bureau of Immigration and Naturalization was placing all "East Indians," a term which included the peoples of "India, Farther India, and Malaysia," in the "Mongolic" grand division.[46]
In 1985, Michael P. Malone of the FBI Laboratory said that the FBI Laboratory is in a good position for the examination of Mongoloid hairs, because it does most of the examinations for Alaska, which has a large Mongoloid population, and it conducts examinations for the majority of Indian reservations in the United States.[47]
In 1987, a report to the National Institute of Justice indicated that the following skeletal collections were of the "Mongoloid" "Ethnic Group": Arctic Eskimo, Prehistoric North American Indian, Japanese, and Chinese.[48]
In 2005, an article in a journal by the FBI Laboratory defined the term "Mongoloid," as the term is used in forensic hair examinations. It defined the term as, "an anthropological term designating one of the major groups of human beings originating from Asia, excluding the Indian subcontinent and including Native American Indians."[49][50]
Use as a term for Down syndrome
[edit]"Mongoloid" has had a second usage, now generally avoided as highly offensive: until the late 20th century, people with Down syndrome[4][5][6][7] were often referred to as "Mongoloids", or in terms of "Mongolian idiocy" or "Mongolian imbecility". The term was motivated by the observation that people with Down syndrome often have epicanthic folds.[51] Coined in 1908, the term remained in medical usage until the 1950s. In 1961, its use was deprecated by a group of genetic experts in an article in The Lancet due to its "misleading connotations".[52] The term continued to be used as a pejorative in the second half of the 20th century, with shortened versions such as mong in slang usage.[53]
In the 21st century, this usage of the term is deemed "unacceptable" in the English-speaking world and has fallen out of common use[54] because of its offensive and misleading implications. The terminology change was brought about both by scientific and medical experts[55] as well as people of Asian ancestry,[55] including those from Mongolia.[56]
See also
[edit]- Craniofacial anthropometry
- Orientalism
- Proto-Mongoloid
- Race (human categorization)
- Race and genetics
References
[edit]- ^ Mongoloid. (2012). Dictionary.com. Retrieved September 3, 2012, from link.
- ^ Templeton, A. (2016). "Evolution and Notions of Human Race". In Losos, J.; Lenski, R. (eds.). How Evolution Shapes Our Lives: Essays on Biology and Society. Princeton; Oxford: Princeton University Press. pp. 346–361. doi:10.2307/j.ctv7h0s6j.26.
- ^ a b c American Association of Physical Anthropologists (27 March 2019). "AAPA Statement on Race and Racism". American Association of Physical Anthropologists. Retrieved 19 June 2020. The organization has since been renamed the American Association of Biological Anthropologists.
- ^ a b Smay, Diana; Armelagos, George. "Galileo Wept: A Critical Assessment of the Use of Race in Forensic Anthropology" (PDF). Emory University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-08-18. Retrieved 2012-10-10.
- ^ a b Lieberman, Leonard (1997). "Out of Our Skulls: Caucasoid, Mongoloid, Negroid?". Anthropology News. 38 (9): 56. doi:10.1111/an.1997.38.9.56.
- ^ a b Templeton, Alan R. "Human Races: A Genetic and Evolutionary Perspective" (PDF). Washington University. Realfuture.org.
- ^ a b Keevak, Michael. "Becoming Yellow: A Short History of Racial Thinking". Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2011. ISBN 978-0-691-14031-5.
- ^ Painter, Nell Irvin (2003). "Why White People are Called Caucasian?" (PDF). Yale University. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 20, 2013. Retrieved September 27, 2007.
- ^ Bhopal R (December 2007). "The beautiful skull and Blumenbach's errors: the birth of the scientific concept of race". BMJ. 335 (7633): 1308–9. doi:10.1136/bmj.39413.463958.80. PMC 2151154. PMID 18156242.
Blumenbach's name has been associated with scientific racism, but his arguments actually undermined racism. Blumenbach could not have foreseen the coming abuse of his ideas and classification in the 19th and (first half of the) 20th centuries.
- ^ Johann Friedrich Blumenbach (1797). Handbuch der Naturgeschichte. p. 60. Retrieved 2020-05-24.
Es giebt nur eine Gattung (species) im Menschengeschlecht; und alle uns bekannte Völker aller Zeiten und aller Himmelsstriche können von einer gemeinschaftlichen Stammrasse abstammen.
- ^ German: "sehr willkürlich": Johann Friedrich Blumenbach (1797). Handbuch der Naturgeschichte. p. 61. Retrieved 2020-05-24.
Alle diese Verschiedenheiten fließen aber durch so mancherley Abstufungen und Uebergänge so unvermerkt zusammen, daß sich keine andre, als sehr willkürliche Grenzen zwischen ihnen festsetzen lassen.
- ^ Bhopal, Raj (22 December 2007). "The beautiful skull and Blumenbach's errors: the birth of the scientific concept of race". BMJ. 335 (7633): 1308–1309. doi:10.1136/bmj.39413.463958.80. PMC 2151154. PMID 18156242.
- ^ Johann Friedrich Blumenbach (1797). Handbuch der Naturgeschichte. pp. 61–62. Retrieved 2020-05-24.
- ^ Huxley, T. H. On the Geographical Distribution of the Chief Modifications of Mankind (1870) Journal of the Ethnological Society of London. Huxley indicates that he has omitted certain areas with complex ethnic compositions that do not fit into his racial paradigm, including much of the Indian subcontinent and Horn of Africa. (Huxley, Thomas (1873). Critiques and Addresses by Thomas Henry Huxley, LL.D., F.R.S. Macmillan and Company. p. 153.) By the late nineteenth century, his Xanthochroi group had been redefined as the Nordic race, whereas his Melanochroi became the Mediterranean race. As such, Huxley's Melanochroi eventually also comprised various other dark Caucasoid populations, including the Hamites and Moors. (Gregory, John Walter (1931). Race as a Political Factor. Watts & Company. p. 19. Retrieved 8 May 2016.)
- ^ Ibram X. Kendi, Stamped from the Beginning. The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America, New York: Nation Books 2016. ISBN 978-1-5685-8464-5, chapters 4, 7–12, 14, 16 passim.
- ^ Huxley, Thomas. Collected Essays of Thomas Huxley: Man's Place in Nature and Other Kessinger Publishing: Montana, 2005. p. 247. ISBN 1-4179-7462-1
- ^ Warren, D.M. (1856). A System of Physical Geography. Philadelphia: H. Cowperthwait & Co. p. 77.
- ^ "Huxley, Thomas, On the Geographical Distribution of the Chief Modifications of Mankind. 1870. August 14, 2006". Aleph0.clarku.edu. Retrieved 2013-12-15.
- ^ Winchell, A. (1881). Preadamites; or A Demonstration of the Existence of Men Before Adam; (3rd ed.). Chicago: S.C. Griggs and Company; London: Trubner & Co. pp. 57, 66.
- ^ Deniker, Joseph. The Races of Man: An Outline of Anthropology and Ethnography C. Scribner's Sons: New York, 1900, p.282 ISBN 0-8369-5932-9
- ^ Gobineau, Arthur (1915). The Inequality of Human Races. Putnam. p. 146. ISBN 978-0-86527-430-3. Retrieved 2007-10-18.
- ^ DiPiero, Thomas. White Men Aren't gid/s work Duke University Press, 2002, p.8 ISBN 0-8223-2961-1
- ^ Blue, Gregory (1999). "Gobineau on China: Race Theory, the "Yellow Peril" and the Critique of Modernity"". Journal of World History. 10 (1): 93–139. doi:10.1353/jwh.2005.0003. JSTOR 20078751. S2CID 143762514.
- ^ Meyers Konversations-Lexikon, 4th ed., 1885–90.
- ^ Robb, Peter (1997). The Concept of Race in South Asia. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-564268-1 – via Google Books.
- ^ Schubert, Stefan Andi (2016). A Genealogy of an Ethnocratic Present: Rethinking Ethnicity after Sri Lanka's Civil War. [page needed] MA thesis, Kansas State University.
- ^ Angel, J. Lawrence (1963). "The Physical Anthropology of Ceylon. Howard W. Stoudt". American Anthropologist. 65 (3): 694–695. doi:10.1525/aa.1963.65.3.02a00260.
- ^ Coon, Carleton Stevens; Hunt, Edward E. (21 April 1966). "The living races of man". Cape – via Google Books.
- ^ von Eickstedt, Egon Frhr. (21 April 2018). "Die Indien-Expedition des Staatlichen Forschungsinstituts für Völkerkunde in Leipzig. 1. Anthropologischer Bericht". Anthropologischer Anzeiger. 4 (3): 208–219. JSTOR 29535004.
- ^ Eickstedt, Egon von (21 April 2018). "Rassenkunde und Rassengeschichte der Menschheit". F. Enke – via Google Books.
- ^ a b c Lieberman, L. (1997). ""Race" 1997 and 2001: A Race Odyssey" (PDF). American Anthropological Association. p. 2.
- ^ a b "The Race Question", UNESCO, 1950, 11pp
- ^ Kroeber, A.L. (1955). History of Anthropological Thought. Yearbook of Anthropology. University of Chicago Press. p. 293. Link.
- ^ Kroeber, A.L. (1948). Anthropology: Race, Language, Culture, Psychology, Prehistory. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company. pp. 126, 131, 133, & 137–140. Link.
- ^ a b Jackson, John Jr. (June 2001). ""In Ways Unacademical": The Reception of Carleton S. Coon's The Origin of Races". Journal of the History of Biology. 34 (2): 247–285. doi:10.1023/A:1010366015968. JSTOR 4331661. S2CID 86739986.
- ^ Cited according to Jackson, John Jr. (June 2001). ""In Ways Unacademical": The Reception of Carleton S. Coon's The Origin of Races". Journal of the History of Biology. 34 (2): 248. doi:10.1023/A:1010366015968. JSTOR 4331661. S2CID 86739986. The reference given there is to "Coon, Origin of the [sic] Races, 1963 [sic], p. 657".
- ^ For a criticism of Coon's relying on typology alone, see also: Gill, George W. (2000). "Does Race Exist? A proponent's perspective". Pbs.org.
- ^ "It may be doubted whether any character can be named which is distinctive of a race and is constant... they graduate into each other, and.. it is hardly possible to discover clear distinctive characters between them... As it is improbable that the numerous and unimportant points of resemblance between the several races of man in bodily structure and mental faculties (I do not here refer to similar customs) should all have been independently acquired, they must have been inherited from progenitors who had these same characters.", Charles Darwin, The Descent of Man p. 225 onwards
- ^ "Indeed, if a species has sufficient gene flow, there can be no evolutionary tree of populations, because there are no population splits...", Templeton, A. (2016). Evolution and Notions of Human Race. In Losos J. & Lenski R. (Eds.), How Evolution Shapes Our Lives: Essays on Biology and Society (p. 355). Princeton; Oxford: Princeton University Press. doi:10.2307/j.ctv7h0s6j.26.
- ^ Templeton, A. (2016). Evolution and Notions of Human Race. In Losos J. & Lenski R. (Eds.), How Evolution Shapes Our Lives: Essays on Biology and Society (pp. 346–361). Princeton; Oxford: Princeton University Press. doi:10.2307/j.ctv7h0s6j.26. That this view reflects the consensus among American anthropologists is stated in: Wagner, Jennifer K.; Yu, Joon-Ho; Ifekwunigwe, Jayne O.; Harrell, Tanya M.; Bamshad, Michael J.; Royal, Charmaine D. (February 2017). "Anthropologists' views on race, ancestry, and genetics". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 162 (2): 318–327. doi:10.1002/ajpa.23120. PMC 5299519. PMID 27874171. See also: American Association of Physical Anthropologists (27 March 2019). "AAPA Statement on Race and Racism". American Association of Physical Anthropologists. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
- ^ "Anthropologie". Meyers Enzyklopädisches Lexikon in 25 Bänden. Neunte, völlig neu bearbeitete Auflage zum 150jährigen Bestehen des Verlages (in German). Vol. 2. p. 308.
flaches Gesicht mit niedriger Nasenwurzel, betonte Jochbogen, flachliegende Lidspalte (die oft schräggestellt ist), dickes, straffes, dunkles Haar, dunkle Augen, gelbbräunl. Haut, in der Regel kurzer, untersetzter Wuchs
- ^ Caroline Wilkinson (2004). Forensic Facial Reconstruction. Cambridge University Press. p. 86. ISBN 0-521-82003-0.
- ^ a b Dahlberg, A.A.; Graber, T.M. (1977). Orofacial growth and development. The Hague: Mouton. pp. 132, 147, 148. doi:10.1515/9783110807554. ISBN 9789027978899.
- ^ a b Joseph K. So (1980). "Human Biological Adaptation to Arctic and Subarctic Zones". Annual Review of Anthropology. 9: 63–82. doi:10.1146/annurev.an.09.100180.000431. JSTOR 2155729.
- ^ a b Burns, John F. & Orsi, Richard J. (2003). Taming the Elephant: Politics, Government, and Law in Pioneer California. Berkeley & Los Angeles: University of California Press. Pages 115 & 116. Google Books link.
- ^ Dillingham, William P. (1911). Reports of the Immigration Commission: Abstracts of Reports of the Immigration Commission. Washington: Government Printing Office. Pages 233 & 256. Google Books link.
- ^ Proceedings of the International Symposium on Forensic Hair Comparisons. (1985). Host Laboratory Division Federal Bureau of Investigation. Pages v (Roman numeral 5) & 112. Wayback Machine link.
- ^ Jantz, R.L. & Moore-Jansen, P.H. (1987). A Data Base for Forensic Anthropology: Final Report to the National Institute of Justice. National Criminal Justice Reference Service. Title Page & Page 4. Wayback Machine link.
- ^ Scientific Working Group on Materials Analysis (SWGMAT). (2005). Forensic Human Hair Examination Guidelines. Forensic Science Communications, (7)2.Wayback Machine link.
- ^ About FSC. (n.d.). The FBI Federal Bureau of Investigation. Wayback Machine link.
- ^ Ward, Connor O. John Langdon (2006). "Down the man and the message". Down-syndrome.info. Archived from the original on 2006-09-02. Retrieved 2013-12-02.
- ^ "The importance of this anomaly among Europeans and their descendants is not related to the segregation of genes derived from Asians; its appearance among members of Asian populations suggests such ambiguous designations as 'Mongol Mongoloid'; increasing participation of Chinese and Japanese in investigation of the condition imposes on them the use of an embarrassing term. We urge, therefore, that the expressions which imply a racial aspect of the condition be no longer used. Some of the undersigned are inclined to replace the term Mongolism by such designations as 'Langdon Down Anomaly', or 'Down's Syndrome or Anomaly', or 'Congenital Acromicria'. Several of us believe that this is an appropriate time to introduce the term 'Trisomy 21 Anomaly', which would include cases of simple Trisomy as well as translocations. It is hoped that agreement on a specific phrase will soon crystallise once the term 'Mongolism' has been abandoned." Allen, G. Benda C.J. et al (1961). Lancet corr. 1, 775.
- ^ Clark, Nicola (October 19, 2011). "Ricky Gervais, please stop using the word 'mong'". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 26 May 2012.
- ^ Rodríguez-Hernández, M. Luisa; Montoya, Eladio (2011-07-30). "Fifty years of evolution of the term Down's syndrome". Lancet. 378 (9789): 402. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(11)61212-9. ISSN 1474-547X. PMID 21803206. S2CID 8541289.
- ^ a b Ward, O Conor (1999). "John Langdon Down: The Man and the Message". Down Syndrome Research and Practice. 6 (1): 19–24. doi:10.3104/perspectives.94. ISSN 0968-7912. PMID 10890244.
- ^ Howard-Jones, Norman (1979). "On the diagnostic term "Down's disease"". Medical History. 23 (1): 102–04. doi:10.1017/s0025727300051048. PMC 1082401. PMID 153994.
External links
[edit]- The dictionary definition of mongoloid at Wiktionary