Colombia and the Legal-Cultural Negotiation of Racial Categories

J. Rappaport
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Abstract

Colombia is a country that has over the past two centuries defined itself as a mestizo nation, but almost no one identifies as mestizo. During the colonial period (16th to 18th centuries), an early modern epistemology of race different from our own was founded in the notion of an ever-changing human body and on a society whose members were only in certain contexts classified by race, fostering fluid taxonomies that cannot be adequately represented by the canonical triad of “white,” “black,” and “Indigenous,” and their admixtures. If, in the 19th century, “scientific” notions of race spread across the globe, this racial discourse took particular forms in each location. In Colombia, racial categories were adjusted to mark geographic, as opposed to individual, diversity. Regions of the nascent Colombia were defined by their “whiteness” or their “blackness,” in a civilizing discourse that attempted to erase but at the same time maintain social hierarchies. This redrawing of racial taxonomies had at its center the goal, for the Andean heartlands at least, of a progressive movement toward whiteness.
哥伦比亚与种族分类的法律-文化谈判
在过去的两个世纪里,哥伦比亚一直将自己定义为一个混血儿国家,但几乎没有人认为自己是混血儿。在殖民时期(16至18世纪),一种不同于我们自己的早期现代种族认识论是建立在一个不断变化的人体和一个社会的概念上的,这个社会的成员只在特定的背景下按种族分类,形成了不稳定的分类,不能用“白人”、“黑人”和“土著”的标准三位一体充分代表。如果说,在19世纪,种族的“科学”概念在全球传播,那么这种种族话语在每个地方都采取了特定的形式。在哥伦比亚,种族分类进行了调整,以标记地理多样性,而不是个人多样性。在一种试图消除但同时又维持社会等级的文明话语中,新生的哥伦比亚的地区被定义为“白”或“黑”。这种种族分类的重新划分,其核心目标是——至少对安第斯山脉的心脏地带来说——一场迈向白人化的进步运动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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