How about, people have considered themselves and others to belong to varying groups over time — Marchesk
You can't get away with making a prima facie absurd claim like "being white is socially constructed" as if it were self-evident. The "better way of saying it," as you put it, is in fact not a way of saying it at all. It's to say something completely different. So pick one and stick to it. — Thorongil
The point is that people in Europe didn't consider themselves to be white before a certain point. — Marchesk
Nonsense. Are you honestly going to tell me that ancient Europeans failed to notice the similarity in their skin tones? If not, then by "white" you mean something other than "white," in which case you ought to use different vocabulary so as to avoid equivocating. — Thorongil
Their lighter skin color compared to certain populations in other parts of the world? — Marchesk
What is the usefulness in calling an entire continent of people "white" or "black" or whatever? What role does it serve? — Marchesk
Do you think the Vikings considered themselves kin with Italians? — Marchesk
However, later classicists have responded that Snowden's work unnecessarily reduced all forms of racism to its peculiarly American version based on skin color and others markers of non-white identity. Thus, Benjamin Isaac (2004) and Denise McCoskey (2012) contend that the ancient Greeks and Romans did hold proto-racist views that applied to other groups which today might be considered white. Isaac persuasively argues that these views must be considered proto-racist: although they were formed without the aid of a modern race concept grounded in ideas of deterministic biology (2004, 5), they nevertheless resembled modern racism by attributing “to groups of people common characteristics considered to be unalterable because they are determined by external factors or heredity” (2004, 38).
Postmodernism alert!
comeuppance
and saying which were their favorites. — The Great Whatever
How is "beneficial to interests" different from meeting one's preferences with respect to interests? — Terrapin Station
(And how are one's interests not just preferences?) — Terrapin Station
Also, aren't you conflating "best for one's interests" and "best interests"? And then within that, you're pretending that a preference for meeting interests isn't a preference. — Terrapin Station
Let's be honest, you already know the difference, and behind all of this posturing, you know that I'm right. — Sapientia
So I'm just being dishonest to aggravate you or something in your view? — Terrapin Station
↪Bitter Crank You ever read Edward Said's Orientalism? Franz Fanon's Wretched of the Earth?
Or how about this. Leopold II's letter to missionaries:
http://www.fafich.ufmg.br/~luarnaut/Letter%20Leopold%20II%20to%20Colonial%20Missionaries.pdf — discoii
Good questions. Wiki claims it was late 17th century for the term modern use of white, but I suppose you would want a more substantial source. — Marchesk
This is just wrong. People were aware of ethnic differences since there have been ethnic differences, and had labels for them. — The Great Whatever
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