Race, taxonomies, and proverbs in Latin American and the Caribbean Discourse

This paper analyzes how race, taxonomies, and proverbs in Latin American and Caribbean societies are interrelated. These taxonomies and proverbs which first gained currency during the 19th century when the now discredited notion of scientific racism was in vogue, contributed to dehumanizing the othe...

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Main Author: Maimouna Sankhé
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Ghana 2019-12-01
Series:Legon Journal of the Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.4314/ljh.v30i1.8
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spelling doaj-f45f62139b1c42b5b546e58bb3ca69ec2020-11-25T03:20:12ZengUniversity of GhanaLegon Journal of the Humanities2458-746X2458-746X2019-12-01301178194https://dx.doi.org/10.4314/ljh.v30i1.8Race, taxonomies, and proverbs in Latin American and the Caribbean DiscourseMaimouna Sankhé0Department of Modern Languages, University of Ghana -Legon, GhanaThis paper analyzes how race, taxonomies, and proverbs in Latin American and Caribbean societies are interrelated. These taxonomies and proverbs which first gained currency during the 19th century when the now discredited notion of scientific racism was in vogue, contributed to dehumanizing the others of colonial conquest in the Americas, including the Blacks and Native Americans. This paper, however, mainly focuses on the experiences of the Blacks and demonstrates how the prejudices resulting from colonial era cultural transactions determined and continue to determine the nature of taxonomies and proverbs in Latin America. This paper will situate its findings on the propositions of Édouard Glissant, Fernando Ortiz and José Vasconcelos on race, taxonomies and ethnicity in Latin America and the Caribbean. This paper concludes that such denominations, taxonomies or sayings were created by the hegemonic culture with the sole aim of dominating the populations involved as well as subjugating them to ill-treatment. The study also makes it obvious that there are many expressions that were born within a colonial context and yet have survived over time, and continue to appear in literature and popular parlance.https://dx.doi.org/10.4314/ljh.v30i1.8taxonomylatin americaraceprejudiceproverb
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maimouna Sankhé
spellingShingle Maimouna Sankhé
Race, taxonomies, and proverbs in Latin American and the Caribbean Discourse
Legon Journal of the Humanities
taxonomy
latin america
race
prejudice
proverb
author_facet Maimouna Sankhé
author_sort Maimouna Sankhé
title Race, taxonomies, and proverbs in Latin American and the Caribbean Discourse
title_short Race, taxonomies, and proverbs in Latin American and the Caribbean Discourse
title_full Race, taxonomies, and proverbs in Latin American and the Caribbean Discourse
title_fullStr Race, taxonomies, and proverbs in Latin American and the Caribbean Discourse
title_full_unstemmed Race, taxonomies, and proverbs in Latin American and the Caribbean Discourse
title_sort race, taxonomies, and proverbs in latin american and the caribbean discourse
publisher University of Ghana
series Legon Journal of the Humanities
issn 2458-746X
2458-746X
publishDate 2019-12-01
description This paper analyzes how race, taxonomies, and proverbs in Latin American and Caribbean societies are interrelated. These taxonomies and proverbs which first gained currency during the 19th century when the now discredited notion of scientific racism was in vogue, contributed to dehumanizing the others of colonial conquest in the Americas, including the Blacks and Native Americans. This paper, however, mainly focuses on the experiences of the Blacks and demonstrates how the prejudices resulting from colonial era cultural transactions determined and continue to determine the nature of taxonomies and proverbs in Latin America. This paper will situate its findings on the propositions of Édouard Glissant, Fernando Ortiz and José Vasconcelos on race, taxonomies and ethnicity in Latin America and the Caribbean. This paper concludes that such denominations, taxonomies or sayings were created by the hegemonic culture with the sole aim of dominating the populations involved as well as subjugating them to ill-treatment. The study also makes it obvious that there are many expressions that were born within a colonial context and yet have survived over time, and continue to appear in literature and popular parlance.
topic taxonomy
latin america
race
prejudice
proverb
url https://dx.doi.org/10.4314/ljh.v30i1.8
work_keys_str_mv AT maimounasankhe racetaxonomiesandproverbsinlatinamericanandthecaribbeandiscourse
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