I have a theory that I'm curious if any academics have explored.
We know today that clearly defined races are a social construct and race is along a spectrum. There is no real scientific or even layman apparent dividing line between, specifically, white and Black. Instead we have a progression of complexion and changing facial features, the result of populations moving and mixing with those around them.
But over most of Western history, there was an apparent dividing line. The difference between a European and a Congolese or Yoruba was obvious, the difference in skin-tone and facial features striking. Race did not seem to be a spectrum.
This was because of the sparsely-populated Sahara separating the Mediterranean basin from the rest of Africa and prohibiting much mixture. In between, we have the Tuareg who would defy traditional Black/white racial classifications, but their numbers have always been small and not well-known. Had this desert not existed, the mixture that occurred among the relatively small population of Tuaregs, would have occurred with much larger populations of Berbers and sub-Saharan Africans. Human variety would have been more obviously on a spectrum.
Thoughts?
Thanks
We know today that clearly defined races are a social construct and race is along a spectrum. There is no real scientific or even layman apparent dividing line between, specifically, white and Black. Instead we have a progression of complexion and changing facial features, the result of populations moving and mixing with those around them.
But over most of Western history, there was an apparent dividing line. The difference between a European and a Congolese or Yoruba was obvious, the difference in skin-tone and facial features striking. Race did not seem to be a spectrum.
This was because of the sparsely-populated Sahara separating the Mediterranean basin from the rest of Africa and prohibiting much mixture. In between, we have the Tuareg who would defy traditional Black/white racial classifications, but their numbers have always been small and not well-known. Had this desert not existed, the mixture that occurred among the relatively small population of Tuaregs, would have occurred with much larger populations of Berbers and sub-Saharan Africans. Human variety would have been more obviously on a spectrum.
Thoughts?
Thanks
Comment