Saturday, August 17, 2019
Race & Ethnicity in Social Sciences Essay
Defining identity can be complex and therefore we have to investigate the factors involved that make us who we are and how we are seen by others, collectively or individually. Social scientists have to consider the key elements which shape identity, the importance of social structures and agency involved. The differences and/or similarities between us are the focus that categorise and label us in society. Knowing who we are is important for many reasons including, social rights, obtaining a passport, housing, health, employment, marriage, and over all, being able to ascertain who we are, and belong. The terms ? raceââ¬â¢ and ? ethnicityââ¬â¢ are central features in the process of categorisation. ?Racialââ¬â¢ or ? Ethnicââ¬â¢ identifications are produced as part of a social process, which is dynamic and changing. Therefore we know that identities are not static and terms such as ? raceââ¬â¢ and ? ethnicityââ¬â¢ cannot cover the changing categories without being dynamic terms themselves. The use of quotation marks with these terms is adopted to emphasise that the terms are broad terms and aim to avoid discrimination or misrepresentation of groups under the umbrella term.? Raceââ¬â¢ is commonly used by media and society to portray the physical differences between people, however, social scientists choose to show that the term does not refer to exact biological differences, is stereotypical, and the quotation marks emphasise the concept as more of an assumption which has political implications. The term is socially constructed and therefore does serve an essential purpose in society as it has real affects and associations. The term ?ethnicityââ¬â¢ refers to cultural practices and history, such as religion, language and territory, where a person or a group derives from, summarising their beliefs and traditions, therefore, ethnicity applies to everyone, necessitating the birth of terms ? minority ethnic groupââ¬â¢ and ? majority ethnic groupââ¬â¢ (Questioning Identity, Ch 4, P124, section 2. 3) to subcategorise identities in relation to ethnicity. Social scientists use quotation marks around these terms to signify that the blanket term does not distinguish between personal and social identity, but acts mainly as a collective identity concept. For example, identification on a British passport may categorise the holder as being ? Britishââ¬â¢ although they may be Scottish/Chinese. Social scientists prefer to call UK society a ? multi-ethnicâ⬠society. These subgroup identities highlight the relational factors which exist in categorising identity, each requiring the other in order to make the comparison between ethnic differences, power and status. Racialization and Ethnicization are preferred concepts as they contribute more to the idea that the identities we adopt are part of a process and are not static, referring to a dynamic process rather than a fixed state. Categorisations from the 1970ââ¬â¢s onwards, such as the definition of ? blackââ¬â¢ or ? whiteââ¬â¢, were too vague, and failed to recognise the specific needs of other ethnic minorities. In order to monitor and measure statistically the discrimination and underachievement of such groups, collecting ? ethnicââ¬â¢ statistics in relation to ? raceââ¬â¢ and ? ethnicityââ¬â¢ was necessary and these can be found in official government censuses. Over the years it became apparent that categorisation of ethnic groups in the censuses rendered some groups ? invisibleââ¬â¢ (Questioning Identity, ch 4, p 137, section 4. 1. 1), for example Irish and Welsh. The category of ? whiteââ¬â¢ has had to be expanded into subcategories as the ? whiteââ¬â¢ grouping classification remained singular within the censuses until 2001, and ethnicization of ? whitesââ¬â¢ was too generalised. (ââ¬Å"Questioning Identity: Kath Woodward ch. 4 p138 ââ¬â Office of Population Censuses and Surveys, 1991) These amendments show us that there have been changes in ethnic representation and that there is more awareness regarding ethnic identities and needs. The sub-categorisation of ethnic identities is used in everyday life such as in the media, job applications and insurance documents. The importance of the emergence of new and changing identities in a multi-ethnic society has led to uncertainties about what it means to be ? Britishââ¬â¢. In the 1980ââ¬â¢s for example, the Commission for Racial Equality sponsored research into the claims by Irish ethnic groups making claims that they were discriminated against by public and private agencies as their ? invisibilityââ¬â¢ misrepresented their particular needs. (Questioning Identity: Kath Woodward, ch. 4, p145). The 1960ââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"Black is Beautifulâ⬠movement (Questioning Identity: Kath Woodward, ch4, 2. 2, p118) campaigned the category of ?blackââ¬â¢, inclusive of Asians and any other non-white groups, as inappropriate and too wide an assumption. Collective group action and social creativity disputed the terminology of ? blackââ¬â¢ and involved a struggle to alter the social meaning of blackness, as opposed to the more ? powerfulââ¬â¢ ethnic majority status of being ? whiteââ¬â¢. This redefined black social status and proved that black identities were not fixed but dynamic, changing from a term with connotations of disrespect, to one of pride, proving identities are collective and political as well as individual and relational, ââ¬Å"Whiteness is used as an invisible marker against which other ?ethnicitiesââ¬â¢ are judgedâ⬠(Kath Woodward, Questioning Identity, Ch 4, p 136, Section 4. 1). REFERENCES DD 121, Questioning Identity: gender, class, ethnicity. Kath Woodward, The Open University, Routledge, 2004. DD121, Workbook 1, Norma Sherratt, David Goldblatt, Maureen Mackintosh and Kath Woodward, The Open University, Routledge, 2004. DD121, Block 1, The Open University, TV02 Defining Moments DD121, Block 1, Audio 2, The Open University, Audio 3A DD121, Block 1, Audio 2, The Open University, Audio 3B.
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