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How Real Is Race?

Unraveling Race, Biology, and Culture, Third Edition

Carol C. Mukhopadhyay; Rosemary Henze and Yolanda T. Moses

Biologically speaking, there is no such thing as race. Yet this seems to contradict the experiences of people in the United States and other countries where racial classification is used daily, by individuals and institutions. Race still matters, whether in wealth accumulation, educational achievement, health, the legal system, or in personal safety. How can race not be real when we experience its effects every day?

Mukhopadhyay, Henze, and Moses systematically deconstruct the myth of race as biology and address the reality of race as a cultural invention, drawing on biocultural, historical, and cross-cultural anthropological perspectives. In doing so, they shed light on the intricate interplay among race, biology, culture, power, and stratification. Part I, “The Fallacy of Race as Biology,” unravels the myth that races are biologically valid divisions of humanity. Part II, “Culture Creates Race,” explores race as a social construction; the emergence of the racial worldview as ideological justification for inequality; and how social processes, especially restrictions on interracial sex and marriage, maintained visible markers of racial hierarchy. Part III, “Contemporary Issues,” examines current manifestations of racial stratification including the educational achievement gap, health disparities, and how the language of race embodies and reinforces a racial worldview.

New to this Edition:

  • New Chapter 11, “Unpacking the Health Consequences of Racial Stratification,” explores the continuing impacts of the racial worldview on race-related health disparities, using the COVID-19 pandemic, maternal health and “weathering,” and exposure to environmental toxins as case studies
  • New Chapter 12, “Dismantling the Racial World View,” explores racial ideology, including language, and offers alternative approaches to racial language dilemmas.
  • Updated and expanded discussion of human evolution includes contemporary critiques and alternative scenarios of long-standing models of human evolution and emphasizes our collective African roots.
  • Updated and expanded coverage of genomics, DNA, epigenetic processes, and the enormous human variability at the molecular level, all challenging “nature” versus “nurture” models of how we become who we are.
  • New data on immigrants, languages, religions, socio-economic and regional racial-ethnic patterns, interracial marriage and other trends explores contemporary diversity in the United States and suggests traditional racial ideology and categories are becoming obsolete.
  • Details
  • Details
  • Author
  • Author
  • TOC
  • TOC
  • Reviews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Features
  • Resources
  • Resources
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 358 • Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-5381-9087-6 • Hardback • March 2025 • $110.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-5381-9086-9 • Paperback • March 2025 • $40.00 • (£30.00)
Subjects: Social Science / Anthropology / General

Carol C. Mukhopadhyay is professor emerita of anthropology at San José State University.

Rosemary C. Henze is professor emerita of linguistics and language development at San José State University.

Yolanda T. Moses is professor emerita of anthropology, University of California, Riverside.

Preface

Acknowledgments

Part I: The Fallacy of Race as Biology

Chapter 1: Why Contemporary Races Are Not Scientifically Valid

Chapter 2: Human Biological Variation: What We Don’t See

Chapter 3: If Not Race, How Do We Explain Biological Differences?

Chapter 4: More Alike Than Different, More Different Than Alike

Part II: Culture Creates Race

Chapter 5: Culture Shapes How We Experience Reality

Chapter 6: Culture and Classification: Race Is Culturally Real

Chapter 7: Race and Inequality: Race as a Social Invention to Achieve Certain Goals

Chapter 8: Cross-cultural Overview of Race

Chapter 9: Race, Sex, and Gender: If Race Doesn’t Exist, What Are We Seeing?

Part III: Contemporary Race Issues: Education, Health, and Language

Chapter 10: The Academic Achievement Gap: What Does Race Have to Do With It?

Chapter 11: Unpacking the Health Consequences of Racial Stratification

Chapter 12: Dismantling the Racial World View

Appendix A. Major Website Resources

Appendix B. Comprehensive List of Activities

References

Index

About the Authors

Race is not biology, but race is very real. This lived, felt, and powerful conundrum is beautifully and effectively explained in this book. With real data, engaging prose, concise conclusions, and key conceptual points at the end of each chapter, this book is a state-of-the-art accessible, meaningful, and effective discussion of what race is, what it is not, and how we can use that information to make a difference. Whether a teacher, student or a member of the general public, anyone interested in understanding what race is, is not, and why that matters, should read this book.


— Agustín Fuentes, Princeton University


How Real Is Race? is one of the most essential books about the intersections of race, racism, and human diversity. The authors' thoughtful, proven exercises help readers to think more profoundly and synthetically. I hope this new, updated edition is read and used widely by teachers, students, and everyone else.


— Alan H. Goodman Ph.D., Professor Hampshire College, former president of the American Anthropological Association


Race is the elephant in the room of American social life. In this masterful work, the authors continue their work of dismantling racial misconceptions and explaining how they act to influence society through false racial notions in culture, education, and health. This book provides us with a program to usher the elephant out the door. This is a critical read for our times.


— Joseph L. Graves Jr., author of Racism, Not Race: Answers to Frequently Asked Questions


How Real Is Race? is destined to be a leading anthropology text. It deepens our understanding of race and racism and clarifies many current debates over topics such as immigration, affirmative action, and even evolution. At a time when racism is resurgent in United States and beyond, this work explains key issues and themes in a very accessible and commonsense way and also draws on the most advanced knowledge from both the social and biological sciences. This valuable and much-needed teaching tool is highly recommended for adoption!


— Howard Winant, University of California Santa Barbara


Race persists as a hierarchic classification, physically marked without biological basis, culturally constructed with real-world consequences. By showing race’s deep, long-term rootedness in global, national, economic, legal, medical, linguistic, gender, and other social institutions and practices shaping culture, this invaluable resource methodically and comprehensively explains anthropological concepts underlying that rootedness.


— Bonnie Urcuioli, Hamilton College, USA


A timely and much-needed update to a brilliantly clear integration of approaches to race and racism from biology, history, linguistics and social science that enables us to grasp human differences and commonalities across physical and cultural dimensions, while revealing how these are structured by and sustain hierarchies of power and privilege.


— Peter Wade, University of Manchester


How Real Is Race? is the essential volume to explain what race is -- and what it isn't. Its strength is its accessible presentation of biological, cultural, and historical perspectives on the racial worldview and its consequences. Updated with today's most compelling data and issues, this remains a necessary read.


— Kristina Wirtz, Western Michigan University; author, Performing Afro-Cuba: Image, Voice, Spectacle in the Making of Race and History


Contentious debates about the very meaning of race rage across nearly every aspect of social organization and cultural life. How Real is Race? offers a wide-ranging and accessible account that deconstructs the concept of race and allows us to fully grasp its multiple and contradictory meanings. By doing so, it challenges the prevailing “racial worldview” and encourages us to move beyond it.


— Michael Omi, University of California, Berkeley


The third edition of How Real is Race? is better and more relevant than ever. The authors continue to frame their analysis with a biocultural, cross-cultural perspective on race. It courageously tackles how race shapes the wealth, health, and well-being of people as well as the lives, livelihoods, and DNA of social groups that have nothing to do with race as biology and everything to do with the construct of race impacting individual and collective bodies. With new and revised chapters, this edition focuses more on ‘unraveling’ the ideology and institutions of race while keeping its distinctive biocultural approach, which makes this a critical anthropological project. The authors intentionally open the conversation to a broad audience in and outside the academy. This book is needed now more than ever.


— Lee D. Baker, Duke University


This book is the clearest and most succinct guide to understanding what race is, and how race thinking has deformed human societies and distorted humanity. Through its meticulous tracing of the history of race, it allows us to see humanity with new eyes, which have been corrected for the aberrations caused by the clouded lens of race.


— Nina Jablonski, Pennsylvania State University


Geneticists can only tell us what race isn’t, but it takes anthropologists to tell us what race is. In the newest edition of their book, the authors explain race holistically, from biological, historical, legal, and cultural perspectives, with contemporary examples and a critical anthropological gaze. This is certainly an important and timely analysis for any reader in these confusing times, and one that I heartily recommend.


— Jonathan Marks, University of North Carolina, Charlotte


Carol Mukhopadhyay, Rosemary Henze, and Yolanda Moses are seriously engaged anthropologists whose co-authored book, How Real is Race? Unraveling Race, Biology, and Culture, is an important contribution. It is an exemplar of socially responsible scholarship committed to serving the public good. More than ever, a compendium of this quality and scope—enriched by a cross-cultural overview--is urgently needed for the life-long learning of a wide range of readers situated across many sectors of society. The contents of the third edition have been enhanced by evidence from the most recent research trends on the difference between the sociocultural life of race and the biology of human variation; the interplay among race, sex, and gender; the effects of racial stratification on public health; and the impact that the racial worldview and its accompanying practices have on academic achievement and immigration policies. At a moment when race has become deeply contentious and dangerously polarizing, we need this book. In a sociopolitical climate in which books on this subject are being censored and banned, we cannot afford to allow the potency and legitimacy of How Real is Race? to be repudiated.


— Faye V. Harrison, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign


This essential, updated text demonstrates how the cultural schemas that constitute the North American racial worldview shape what aspects of biology we pay attention to and which we ignore. At a time of polarizing political discourses, students, educators, clinicians, and many others will appreciate the way the authors anticipate and address their questions, carefully separating biological fact from fiction.


— Claudia Strauss, Pitzer College


  • Biocultural framework demonstrates how cultural and social processes, especially power hierarchies, shape how we interpret human biology, the meanings attached to visible human traits like skin color, and the use of biology to justify racial inequality.
  • Explores the complex relationships between race, biology, history, culture, ideology, power, and systems of social inequality.
  • Examines the intersections of race, gender, and sexuality including anti-miscegenation laws, immigration legislation, DNA ancestry-tracing, health disparities, and contemporary interracial-interethnic dating-marriage patterns.
  • Chapter conclusions, key conceptual points, and key terms facilitate learning and a companion website includes a robust collection of classroom activities for instructor use


FOR STUDENTS
Accompanying the text is an open-access Companion Website designed to reinforce the main topics and help you master key vocabulary and concepts through flashcards and self-graded quizzes.
FOR PROFESSORS
Ancillary Materials are available for this title. For access to these professor use only materials, please Sign-In if you are a registered user, or Register then email us at rltextbooks@bloomsbury.com
Instructor's Manual. For each chapter, this valuable resource provides a variety of tools such as lecture outlines, student learning objectives, discussion questions, and other resources to simplify classroom preparation.

How Real Is Race?

Unraveling Race, Biology, and Culture, Third Edition

Cover Image
Hardback
Paperback
Summary
Summary
  • Biologically speaking, there is no such thing as race. Yet this seems to contradict the experiences of people in the United States and other countries where racial classification is used daily, by individuals and institutions. Race still matters, whether in wealth accumulation, educational achievement, health, the legal system, or in personal safety. How can race not be real when we experience its effects every day?

    Mukhopadhyay, Henze, and Moses systematically deconstruct the myth of race as biology and address the reality of race as a cultural invention, drawing on biocultural, historical, and cross-cultural anthropological perspectives. In doing so, they shed light on the intricate interplay among race, biology, culture, power, and stratification. Part I, “The Fallacy of Race as Biology,” unravels the myth that races are biologically valid divisions of humanity. Part II, “Culture Creates Race,” explores race as a social construction; the emergence of the racial worldview as ideological justification for inequality; and how social processes, especially restrictions on interracial sex and marriage, maintained visible markers of racial hierarchy. Part III, “Contemporary Issues,” examines current manifestations of racial stratification including the educational achievement gap, health disparities, and how the language of race embodies and reinforces a racial worldview.

    New to this Edition:

    • New Chapter 11, “Unpacking the Health Consequences of Racial Stratification,” explores the continuing impacts of the racial worldview on race-related health disparities, using the COVID-19 pandemic, maternal health and “weathering,” and exposure to environmental toxins as case studies
    • New Chapter 12, “Dismantling the Racial World View,” explores racial ideology, including language, and offers alternative approaches to racial language dilemmas.
    • Updated and expanded discussion of human evolution includes contemporary critiques and alternative scenarios of long-standing models of human evolution and emphasizes our collective African roots.
    • Updated and expanded coverage of genomics, DNA, epigenetic processes, and the enormous human variability at the molecular level, all challenging “nature” versus “nurture” models of how we become who we are.
    • New data on immigrants, languages, religions, socio-economic and regional racial-ethnic patterns, interracial marriage and other trends explores contemporary diversity in the United States and suggests traditional racial ideology and categories are becoming obsolete.
Details
Details
  • Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
    Pages: 358 • Trim: 6 x 9
    978-1-5381-9087-6 • Hardback • March 2025 • $110.00 • (£85.00)
    978-1-5381-9086-9 • Paperback • March 2025 • $40.00 • (£30.00)
    Subjects: Social Science / Anthropology / General
Author
Author
  • Carol C. Mukhopadhyay is professor emerita of anthropology at San José State University.

    Rosemary C. Henze is professor emerita of linguistics and language development at San José State University.

    Yolanda T. Moses is professor emerita of anthropology, University of California, Riverside.

Table of Contents
Table of Contents
  • Preface

    Acknowledgments

    Part I: The Fallacy of Race as Biology

    Chapter 1: Why Contemporary Races Are Not Scientifically Valid

    Chapter 2: Human Biological Variation: What We Don’t See

    Chapter 3: If Not Race, How Do We Explain Biological Differences?

    Chapter 4: More Alike Than Different, More Different Than Alike

    Part II: Culture Creates Race

    Chapter 5: Culture Shapes How We Experience Reality

    Chapter 6: Culture and Classification: Race Is Culturally Real

    Chapter 7: Race and Inequality: Race as a Social Invention to Achieve Certain Goals

    Chapter 8: Cross-cultural Overview of Race

    Chapter 9: Race, Sex, and Gender: If Race Doesn’t Exist, What Are We Seeing?

    Part III: Contemporary Race Issues: Education, Health, and Language

    Chapter 10: The Academic Achievement Gap: What Does Race Have to Do With It?

    Chapter 11: Unpacking the Health Consequences of Racial Stratification

    Chapter 12: Dismantling the Racial World View

    Appendix A. Major Website Resources

    Appendix B. Comprehensive List of Activities

    References

    Index

    About the Authors

Reviews
Reviews
  • Race is not biology, but race is very real. This lived, felt, and powerful conundrum is beautifully and effectively explained in this book. With real data, engaging prose, concise conclusions, and key conceptual points at the end of each chapter, this book is a state-of-the-art accessible, meaningful, and effective discussion of what race is, what it is not, and how we can use that information to make a difference. Whether a teacher, student or a member of the general public, anyone interested in understanding what race is, is not, and why that matters, should read this book.


    — Agustín Fuentes, Princeton University


    How Real Is Race? is one of the most essential books about the intersections of race, racism, and human diversity. The authors' thoughtful, proven exercises help readers to think more profoundly and synthetically. I hope this new, updated edition is read and used widely by teachers, students, and everyone else.


    — Alan H. Goodman Ph.D., Professor Hampshire College, former president of the American Anthropological Association


    Race is the elephant in the room of American social life. In this masterful work, the authors continue their work of dismantling racial misconceptions and explaining how they act to influence society through false racial notions in culture, education, and health. This book provides us with a program to usher the elephant out the door. This is a critical read for our times.


    — Joseph L. Graves Jr., author of Racism, Not Race: Answers to Frequently Asked Questions


    How Real Is Race? is destined to be a leading anthropology text. It deepens our understanding of race and racism and clarifies many current debates over topics such as immigration, affirmative action, and even evolution. At a time when racism is resurgent in United States and beyond, this work explains key issues and themes in a very accessible and commonsense way and also draws on the most advanced knowledge from both the social and biological sciences. This valuable and much-needed teaching tool is highly recommended for adoption!


    — Howard Winant, University of California Santa Barbara


    Race persists as a hierarchic classification, physically marked without biological basis, culturally constructed with real-world consequences. By showing race’s deep, long-term rootedness in global, national, economic, legal, medical, linguistic, gender, and other social institutions and practices shaping culture, this invaluable resource methodically and comprehensively explains anthropological concepts underlying that rootedness.


    — Bonnie Urcuioli, Hamilton College, USA


    A timely and much-needed update to a brilliantly clear integration of approaches to race and racism from biology, history, linguistics and social science that enables us to grasp human differences and commonalities across physical and cultural dimensions, while revealing how these are structured by and sustain hierarchies of power and privilege.


    — Peter Wade, University of Manchester


    How Real Is Race? is the essential volume to explain what race is -- and what it isn't. Its strength is its accessible presentation of biological, cultural, and historical perspectives on the racial worldview and its consequences. Updated with today's most compelling data and issues, this remains a necessary read.


    — Kristina Wirtz, Western Michigan University; author, Performing Afro-Cuba: Image, Voice, Spectacle in the Making of Race and History


    Contentious debates about the very meaning of race rage across nearly every aspect of social organization and cultural life. How Real is Race? offers a wide-ranging and accessible account that deconstructs the concept of race and allows us to fully grasp its multiple and contradictory meanings. By doing so, it challenges the prevailing “racial worldview” and encourages us to move beyond it.


    — Michael Omi, University of California, Berkeley


    The third edition of How Real is Race? is better and more relevant than ever. The authors continue to frame their analysis with a biocultural, cross-cultural perspective on race. It courageously tackles how race shapes the wealth, health, and well-being of people as well as the lives, livelihoods, and DNA of social groups that have nothing to do with race as biology and everything to do with the construct of race impacting individual and collective bodies. With new and revised chapters, this edition focuses more on ‘unraveling’ the ideology and institutions of race while keeping its distinctive biocultural approach, which makes this a critical anthropological project. The authors intentionally open the conversation to a broad audience in and outside the academy. This book is needed now more than ever.


    — Lee D. Baker, Duke University


    This book is the clearest and most succinct guide to understanding what race is, and how race thinking has deformed human societies and distorted humanity. Through its meticulous tracing of the history of race, it allows us to see humanity with new eyes, which have been corrected for the aberrations caused by the clouded lens of race.


    — Nina Jablonski, Pennsylvania State University


    Geneticists can only tell us what race isn’t, but it takes anthropologists to tell us what race is. In the newest edition of their book, the authors explain race holistically, from biological, historical, legal, and cultural perspectives, with contemporary examples and a critical anthropological gaze. This is certainly an important and timely analysis for any reader in these confusing times, and one that I heartily recommend.


    — Jonathan Marks, University of North Carolina, Charlotte


    Carol Mukhopadhyay, Rosemary Henze, and Yolanda Moses are seriously engaged anthropologists whose co-authored book, How Real is Race? Unraveling Race, Biology, and Culture, is an important contribution. It is an exemplar of socially responsible scholarship committed to serving the public good. More than ever, a compendium of this quality and scope—enriched by a cross-cultural overview--is urgently needed for the life-long learning of a wide range of readers situated across many sectors of society. The contents of the third edition have been enhanced by evidence from the most recent research trends on the difference between the sociocultural life of race and the biology of human variation; the interplay among race, sex, and gender; the effects of racial stratification on public health; and the impact that the racial worldview and its accompanying practices have on academic achievement and immigration policies. At a moment when race has become deeply contentious and dangerously polarizing, we need this book. In a sociopolitical climate in which books on this subject are being censored and banned, we cannot afford to allow the potency and legitimacy of How Real is Race? to be repudiated.


    — Faye V. Harrison, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign


    This essential, updated text demonstrates how the cultural schemas that constitute the North American racial worldview shape what aspects of biology we pay attention to and which we ignore. At a time of polarizing political discourses, students, educators, clinicians, and many others will appreciate the way the authors anticipate and address their questions, carefully separating biological fact from fiction.


    — Claudia Strauss, Pitzer College


Features
Features
    • Biocultural framework demonstrates how cultural and social processes, especially power hierarchies, shape how we interpret human biology, the meanings attached to visible human traits like skin color, and the use of biology to justify racial inequality.
    • Explores the complex relationships between race, biology, history, culture, ideology, power, and systems of social inequality.
    • Examines the intersections of race, gender, and sexuality including anti-miscegenation laws, immigration legislation, DNA ancestry-tracing, health disparities, and contemporary interracial-interethnic dating-marriage patterns.
    • Chapter conclusions, key conceptual points, and key terms facilitate learning and a companion website includes a robust collection of classroom activities for instructor use


Resources
Resources
  • FOR STUDENTS
    Accompanying the text is an open-access Companion Website designed to reinforce the main topics and help you master key vocabulary and concepts through flashcards and self-graded quizzes.
    FOR PROFESSORS
    Ancillary Materials are available for this title. For access to these professor use only materials, please Sign-In if you are a registered user, or Register then email us at rltextbooks@bloomsbury.com
    Instructor's Manual. For each chapter, this valuable resource provides a variety of tools such as lecture outlines, student learning objectives, discussion questions, and other resources to simplify classroom preparation.

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  • Gooseberry Patch
  • Lyons Press
  • Muddy Boots
  • Pineapple Press
  • TwoDot Books
  • Stackpole Books
PARTNERS
  • American Alliance of Museums
  • American Association for State and Local History
  • Brookings Institution Press
  • Center for Strategic & International Studies
  • Council on Foreign Relations
  • Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
  • Fortress Press
  • The Foundation for Critical Thinking
  • Lehigh University Press
  • United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
  • Other Partners...