I have been talking to people - family members, students, colleagues, whoever will listen - about this book since I started it and now, as happy as I am to pass it along to the next reader, I kind of hate to let it go. It's a brilliant book, beautifully researched and written, incredibly humane and even-handed, informative, timely, moving, thought-provoking, and perspective-altering. It moves through time, introducing us to remarkable people, complex and difficult people, but brilliant and brave, too. We begin with Franz Boas, or, really, with Margaret Mead, one of his many incredibly accomplished students, and move through Boas' story and then Mead's and other students' stories, from the late 1800s until the 1970s. Each person is compelling and King treats them with respect, telling their stories clearly and objectively, but with a kind of gentleness. There's something wonderful knowing that each of these people was in the world, transforming it with their ideas and hard work and deep commitment.
But it's the context in which these people were working that makes the book as exciting and infuriating and inspiring as it is. These scholars spent their lives working against simplistic, hateful, reductive narratives; against using self-serving theories rooted in a blinkered, uncritical sense of superiority to reduce others to somehow lesser-than, uncivilized, unacceptable, and, in the worst cases, unworthy of living. Boas and Mead and Hurston and Benedict used evidence and the nascent field of anthropology to demonstrate that people are people, full stop, regardless of the color of their skin, their sexual preferences, their social practices and belief systems, or how they organize themselves. They did this in the face of close-mindedness and judgement and hatefulness and just kept doing it, each of them, until they died. And they taught their students to do this, too. They represented tolerance, acceptance, appreciation, and respect in a world that keeps tending towards self-serving judgment, rejection, fear, and oppression.
I'm going to use this review as notes, so it's going to be long.
p.84: Darwin saw some people as more backwards and others as more advanced, but attributed that to environment and circumstance, not inherent traits.
p.84: "In the United States, the end of the Civil War produced not so much a dismantling of the Old South as a transfer of many of its core traits to the national level. Pardons of former Confederate generals and officeholders allowed many to return to Congress or occupy appointed posts in the federal government. With the formal end of Reconstruction, these leaders launched a new wave of race-oriented legislation. Legally enforcing segregation, prohibitions on interracial marriage, voting restrictions, and other policies introduced in the 1890s forward created a race-based system of politics and social relations - the authoritarian apartheid scheme eventually known as Jim Crow. The U.S. court system similarly developed an expansive body of case law that made whiteness into a clear legal category. Attorneys called on the expertise of historians, ethnologists, and other specialists to confirm the scientific validity of the country's bedrock schema for coding human beings. In 1878 a precedent-setting opinion affirmed that Chinese were not white. Similar decisions determined the nonwhite status of Hawaiians in 1889, Burmese and Japanese in 1894, Native Americans in 1900, Filipinos in 1916, and Koreans in 1921, while judges ruled Mexicans, Armenians, "Asian Indians," and Syrians to be biological "Caucasians" in 1897, 1909, and 1910, respectively.. The consequences of these cases were immediate and practical. They determined one's ability to buy property in a race-restricted neighborhood, give birth in a race-restricted hospital," etc. At a time when Arkansas is using the law to exclude trans people from basic services and opportunities and when Georgia is passing legislation to reduce access to voting as a response to massive Black voter turnout in the last election (predicating its actions on The Big Lie that the election was "stolen" from Trump), it's clear that we haven't gotten better than this.
p.100: Boas pointed out that "historical events appear to have been much more potent in leading races to civilization than their faculty, and it follows that achievements of races do not warrant us in assuming that one race is more highly gifted than the other."
p.100: Boas thought it was nonsense to believe there was some linear pathway to human civilization and saw Europeans, with their thin lips, short legs, and back hair as seeming most ape-like, if it were going to come down to physical traits.
p.102: to understand others, Boas believed "you had to try as hard as possible to divest yourself of the opinions common to the environment in which you were born. You had to struggle to follow new trains of thought and new logic, to grab onto new emotions. ...Otherwise you couldn't claim to understand anything at all. You were simply staring at your own biases, reflected back at you in the mirror of someone else's culture."
p.103: Boas wrote: "It is somewhat difficult for us to recognize the value which we attribute to our own civilization is due to the fact that we participate in this civilization, and that it has been controlling all our actions since the time of our birth; but it is certainly conceivable that there may be other civilizations, based perhaps on different traditions and on a different equilibrium of emotion and reason, which are of no less value than ours, although it may be impossible for us to appreciate their values without having grown up under their influence. The general theory of valuation of human activities, as developed by anthropological research, teaches us a higher tolerance than the one which we now profess."
p.108: on the anti-German sentiments and actions of the US population and government at the outset of WWI: "The public reactions to these shifts in policy and political rhetoric was predictable. Murders, floggings by impromptu 'citizen's committees,' lynchings, tarrings-and-featherings, and widespread vandalism..." Sadly, today's anti-Asian violence, re-ignited by Trump's disgusting racist reference to Covid as "the China flu" and "Kung flu" is rooted in the same tendencies and is made all the less escapable by too many White Americans' persistent perceptions (and treatment) of BIPOC as "other," as less-than-citizens, merely on the basis of their physical features, which are too often conflated with unrelated attributes, identities, and behaviors, including intellect, beliefs, abilities, nationality, "culture," and competitiveness.
p.110: Boas "had come to the United States full of optimism that the nationalist conflicts he had known in Europe would be foreign in this melting pot nation. But in 1898, he had a "rude awakening" and a period of "profound disappointment." America had embarked on its own imperialist expansion in the war with Spain and in its brutal colonial administration of the Philippines."
p.110: Boas wrote: "I have always been of the opinion that we have no right to impose our ideals upon other nations, no matter how strange it may seem to us that they enjoy the kind of life they lead, how slow they may be in utilizing the resources of their countries, or how much opposed their ideals may be to our own." THIS THIS THIS
p.111: in critiquing and criticizing Madison Grant's book The Passing of the Great Race, Boas denied the existence of race as a thing at all. And more: "Racism was at base the belief in the inheritable reality of race itself - an idea trussed up in the language of science and, as such, every bit as much a product of Western culture as, say, a painted mask was the product of the Kwakiutl. When there was no evidence for a theory, Boas had suggested in The Mind of Primitive Man, you had to let it go -- especially if that theory just happened to place people like you at the center of the universe. Otherwise, what you called science was nothing more than nonsense on stilts." King goes on to describe Grant's book as nonetheless resonating with people who appreciated its message and saw it validated in the material wealth of Europeans and Americans. His book, therefore, sold briskly. *sigh*
p.113: on racism and immigration laws as efforts to reinforce the white population
p.114-115: Adolph Hitler called The Passing of the Great Race his bible, and wrote in Mein Kampf that the US was, in King's words, "showing the way to a brighter, more scientific way of building a political community." Hitler wrote: "A state which in this age of racial poisoning dedicates itself to the care of its best racial elements must someday become lord of the earth." Holy cats.
p.115: Boas complained: "Whether that be family life, local patriotism, college spirit, nationalism, religious intolerance - it is always the same. Must one always kick the other fellow just because one likes one's own way of life?" THIS!
p.169: "...the web of possible social connections in any society was a direct product of the way that society wielded basic concepts such as family, power, and order."
p.174: the roots of eugenics
p.176: the USSC does a terrible thing, upholding forced sterilization on the basis of eugenics, with Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. opining: "It is better for all the world, if instead of waiting to execute degenerate offspring for crime, or to let them starve for their imbecility, society can prevent those who are manifestly unfit from continuing their kind."
p.178: Boas argued, in King's words, that "we should try to hold two things in our heads at once: first, that all people are individuals, with their own talents and tribulations, and second, that we are social beings who cling desperately to the sense of reality in which we are reared." Boas wrote: "We cannot treat the individual as an isolated unit. He must be studied in his social setting, and the question is relevant whether generalization are possible by which a functional relation between generalized social data and the form and expression of individual life can be discovered; in other words, whether any generally valid laws exist that govern the life of society."
p.179: King explains Boas as arguing "When we think we are studying people out there, we are really making claims about people's lives right HERE- about us and our neighbors, about our sense of the normal, the evident, and the standard." Boas wrote: "We classify the variety of forms according to our previous experiences." King goes on to explain:"Every society trains itself to see categories. Whom you love, whom you hate, the kind of person you'd be disgusted to see your daughter marry- none of these problems follow universal rules of attraction or repulsion. They are instead notions fired in the crucible of culture. The mobilization of sham science [THIS THIS THIS!] to justify bigotry might be said to be a deep characteristic of only one culture: that of the developed West." This page is RICH with observations, including about how societies define criminal behavior.
p.184: Mead wrote that all societies are "experiments in what could be done with human nature."
p.197: a telling of the massacre at Ocoee over Black voting rights. Oh, white supremacists, you have created hell again and again.
p.199: lynchings and labor bondage - the shift to Jim Crow
p.204: Boas at times embodied Kendi's distinctions and though he was radical for his time, and courageous in his science and promulgation of it, he was not truly anti-racist. He believed that Black people are as capable and competent as any other, yes, but also that Black Americans' CULTURE was degraded by slavery and maltreatment and therefore left Black Americans underdeveloped. And here and on the next page, it's clear that Alfred Kroeber, whatever good he might have done in his collections of indigenous lore and art and language was actually the pretty horrifying racist who just got canceled at Berkeley (2021). The irony being that this racism coincided with the Harlem Renaissance and W.E.B. DuBois.
p.228: "Understanding the social lives of any [group of people] wasn't about one grand theory or one summer's fieldwork. What you needed was repeated and respectful conversation with the real human beings whose worlds you were straining, as best you could, to comprehend."
p.232: the irony of White Americans dressing up as Native Americans, whom they'd attempted to wipe out and effectively marginalized and relegated to poverty and suffering, for sporting events.
p.265-266: Benedict argued that for the outside observer of ANY group (factory workers or a remote tribe of people), in King's words, "the key was to make oneself what Benedict called 'culture-conscious': fully aware of the ways in which one's own gut-level response to difference - a catch in the throat, exasperation at some other society's stupidity, even visceral disgust - was in fact a clash between two worlds, each with its own unique patterns. No institution, no habit, no way of acting that any given society saw as basic, obvious, and normal was ever inevitable. There were all - even Rotary Club luncheons and High Table dinners - selections from 'the great arc of potential human purposes and motivations.'"
p.266: Benedict wrote: "The recognition of cultural relativity carries with it its own values, which need not be those of the absolutist philosophies. It challenges customary opinions and causes those who have been bred to them acute discomfort. It rouses pessimism because it throws old formulas into confusion, not because it contains anything intrinsically difficult. As soon as the new opinion is embraced as customary belief, it will be another trusted bulwark of the good life. We shall arrive then at a more realistic social faith, accepting as grounds of hope and as new bases for tolerance the coexisting and equally valid patterns of life which mankind has created for itself from the raw materials of existence." THIS IS BEAUTIFUL.
p.267: King explains that the fundamental point of Benedict's book Patterns of Culture was that there's no such thing as a defective human being.
p.274: King writes: "Cultures are cunning tailors. They cut garments from convenience and then work hard to shape individuals to fit them. ...Real liberation wasn't necessarily about making women more manly or allowing men to be effeminate. It was about unleashing human beings' potential from the roles that society had fashioned, seeing each person as a parcel of possibilities that might get expressed in many creative ways. Cultural change came about when enough people began to see that the old clothes simply didn't fit." I LOVE THIS.
I ran out of room, danggit. Will transfer to notes. But read the book. It's brilliant.