Need summary of the reading
RETHINKING RACISM:
TOWARD A STRUCTURAL INTERPRETATION*
Eduardo Bonilla-Silva
The University of Michigan
The ittidy of race and ethnic conflict historically has been hampered by inadequate and simplistic theories. I contend that the central problem of the
various approaches to the study of racial phenomena is their lack of a structural theory of racism. I review traditional approaches and alternative approaches to the study of racism, and discuss their limitations. Following the
leads suggested by some of the alternative frameworks, I advance a structural theory of racism based on the notion of racialized social systems.
“The habit of considering racism as a mental quirk, as a psychological flaw, must be
abandoned.”
—Frantz Fanon (1967:77)
T
he area of race and ethnic studies lacks a
sound theoretical apparatus. To complicate matters, many analysts of racial matters
have abandoned the serious theorization and
reconceptualization of their central topic: racism. Too many social analysts researching
racism assume that the phenomenon is selfevident, and therefore either do not provide a
definition or provide an elementary definition
(Schuman, Steeh, and Bobo 1985; Sniderman
and Piazza 1993). Nevertheless, whether implicitly or explicitly, most analysts regard racism as a purely ideological phenomenon.
‘ Direct correspondence to Eduardo BonillaSilva, Department of Sociology, University of
Michigan, 3012 Literature, Science, and Arts
Building, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1382 (ebonilla®
”umich.edu). This research was supported in part
by the Rockefeller Foundation (1995-1996 Postdoctoral Fellowship at Washington State University) and by the Center for African and African
American Studies at the University of Michigan. I
thank Professors Erik O. Wright and Pamela
Oliver at the University of Wisconsin for their
valuable feedback on an earlier draft of this paper, the members of the Faculty Seminar on Race
and Ethnicity at the University of Michigan for
their intellectual support, and Pat Preston at
Michigan and Jane Fredrickson at Washington
State University, who provided valuable editorial
advice. I also thank Charles Tilly and the three
anonymous ASR reviewers for their thorough and
helpful comments.
Although the concept of racism has become the central analytical category in most
contemporary social scientific discourse on
racial phenomena, the concept is of recent
origin (Banton 1970; Miles 1989, 1993). It
was not employed at all in the classic works
of Thomas and Znaniecki (1918), Edward
Reuter (1934), Gunnar Myrdal (1944), and
Robert Park (1950).’ Benedict (1945) was
one of the first scholars to use the notion of
racism in her book. Race and Racism. She
defined racism as “the dogma that one ethnic
group is condemned by nature to congenital
inferiority and another group is destined to
congenital superiority” (p. 87). Despite some
refinements, current use of the concept of
racism in the social sciences is similar to
Benedict’s. Thus van den Berghe (1967)
states that racism is “any set of beliefs that
organic, genetically transmitted differences
(whether real or imagined) between human
groups are intrinsically associated with the
presence or the absence of certain socially
relevant abilities or characteristics, hence
that such differences are a legitimate basis of
invidious distinctions between groups socially defined as races” (p. 11, emphasis
added). Schaefer (1990) provides a more
concise definition of racism: ” . . . a doctrine
of racial supremacy, that one race is superior” (p. 16).
‘ Yet they employed the very similar notion of
ethnocentrism as developed by William Graham
Sumner (1906). According to Sumner (1906) ethnocentrism was the belief that “one’s own group
is at the center of everything, and all others are
scaled and rated with reference to it” (p. 13).
American Sociological Review, 1996, Vol. 62 (June:465-480)
465
466
This idealist view is still held widely
among social scientists. Its narrow focus on
ideas has reduced the study of racism mostly
to social psychology, and this perspective has
produced a schematic view of the way racism operates in society. First, racism is defined as a set of ideas or beliefs. Second,
those beliefs are regarded as having the potential to lead individuals to develop prejudice, defined as “negative attitudes towards
an entire group of people” (Schaefer 1990:
53). Finally, these prejudicial attitudes may
induce individuals to real actions or discrimination against racial minorities. This conceptual framework, with minor modifications,
prevails in the social sciences.
Some alternative perspectives on racism
have closely followed the prevailing ideological conceptualization in the social sciences. For example, orthodox Marxists (Cox
1948; Perlo 1975; Szymanski 1981, 1983),
who regard class and class struggle as the
central explanatory variables of social life,
reduce racism to a legitimating ideology used
by the bourgeoisie to divide the working
class. Even neo-Marxists (Bonacich 1980a,
1980b; Carcbedi 1987; Cohen 1989; Hall
1980; Miles 1989, 1993; Miles and
Phizacklea 1984; Solomos 1986, 1989;
Wolpe 1986, 1988) share to various degrees
the limitations of the orthodox Marxist view:
the primacy of class, racism viewed as an
ideology, and class dynamics as the real engine of racial dynamics. For example, although Bonacich’s work provides an interesting twist by regarding race relations and racism as products of a split labor market, giving theoretical primacy to divisions within
the working class, racial antagonisms are still
regarded as byproducts of class dynamics.
Other scholars have advanced nonideological interpretations of racism but have
stopped short of developing a structural
conceptualization of racial matters. From the
institutionalist perspective (Alvarez et al.
1979; Carmichael 1971; Carmichael and
Hamilton 1967; Chesler 1976; Knowles and
Prewitt 1969; Wellman 1977), racism is defined as a combination of prejudice and
power that allows the dominant race to institutionalize its dominance at all levels in a society. Similarly, from the internal colonialism perspective (Barrera 1979; Blauner
1972; Moore 1970), racism is viewed as an
AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW
institutional matter based on a system in
which the White majority “raises its social
position by exploiting, controlling, and keeping down others who are categorized in racial or ethnic terms” (Blauner 1972:22). The
main difference between these two perspectives is that the latter regards racial minorities as colonial subjects in the United States;
this view leads unequivocally to nationalist
solutions.^ Both perspectives contribute
greatly to our understanding of racial phenomena by stressing the social and systemic
nature of racism and the Structured nature of
White advantages. Furthermore, the effort of
the institutionalist perspective to uncover
contemporary mechanisms and practices that
reproduce White advantages is still empirically useful (e.g., Knowles and Prewitt
1969). Yet neither of these perspectives provides a rigorous conceptual framework that
allows analysts to study the operation of racially stratified societies.
The racial formation perspective (Omi and
Winant 1986, 1994; Winant 1994) is the most
recent theoretical alternative to mainstream
idealist approaches. Omi and Winant (1994)
define racial formation as “the sociobistorical process by which racial categories are
created, inhabited, transformed, and destroyed” (p. 55). In their view, race should
be regarded as an organizing principle of social relationships that shapes the identity of
individual actors at the micro level and
shapes all spheres of social life at the macro
level.
Although this perspective represents a
breakthrough, it still gives undue attention to
ideological/cultural processes,^ does not regard races as truly social collectivities, and
overemphasizes the racial projects (Omi and
Winant 1994; Winant 1994) of certain actors
(neoconservatives, members of the far right,
liberals), thus obscuring the social and general character of racialized societies.
•^ Carmichael and Hamilton (1967) also advocate nationalist strategies. Unlike other institutionalists, however, they insist on the colonial relationship of minorities to the majority in the
United States.
‘ In the most recent edition of Racial Formation in the United States, Omi and Winant (1994)
move closer to a structural view, but they still retain the ideological and juridico-political focus
that characterizes the original edition.
RETHINKING RACISM: TOWARD A STRUCTURAL INTERPRETATION
In this paper I point out the limitations of
most contemporary frameworks used to analyze racial issues and suggest an alternative
structural theory built on some of the ideas
and concepts elaborated by the institutionalist, the internal colonial, and the racial formation perspectives. Although “racism” has
a definite ideological component, reducing
racial phenomena to ideas limits the possibility of understanding how it shapes a
race’s life chances. Rather than viewing racism as an all-powerful ideology that explains all racial phenomena in a society, I
use tbe term racism only to describe the racial ideology of a racialized social system.
That is, racism is only part of a larger racial
system.
LIMITATIONS OF MAINSTREAM
IDEALIST VIEWS AND OF SOME
ALTERNATIVE FRAMEWORKS
I describe below some of the main limitations of the idealist conception of racism.
Because not all limitations apply to the institutionalist, the internal colonialist, and the
racial formation perspectives, I point out the
ones that do apply, and to what extent.
Racism is excluded from the foundation
or structure of the sociat system. When racism is regarded as a baseless ideology ultimately dependent on other, “real” forces in
society, the structure of the society itself is
not classified as racist. The Marxist perspective is particularly guilty of this shortcoming.
Although Marxists have addressed the question of the historical origin of racism, they
explain its reproduction in an idealist fashion. Racism, in their accounts, is an ideology that emerged with chattel slavery and
other forms of class oppression to justify the
exploitation of people of color and survives
as a residue of the past. Although some
Marxists have attempted to distance their
analysis from this purely ideological view
(Solomos 1986; Wolpe 1988) and to ground
racial phenomena in social relations, they do
so by ultimately subordinating racial matters
to class matters.
Even though the institutionalist, internal
colonialism, and racial formation perspectives regard racism as a structural phenomenon and provide some useful ideas and concepts, they do not develop the theoretical ap-
467
paratus necessary to describe how this structure operates.
Racism is ultimately viewed as a psychological phenomenon to be examined at the
individual level. The research agenda that
follows from this conceptualization is the examination of individuals’ attitudes to determine levels of racism in society (Schuman et
al. 1985; Sears 1988; Sniderman and Piazza
1993). Given that the constructs used to measure racism are static—that is, that there are
a number of standard questions which do not
change significantly over time—this research
usually finds that racism is declining in society. Those analysts who find that racist attitudes are still with us usually leave unexplained why this is so (Sniderman and Piazza
1993).
This psychological understanding of racism is related to the limitation I cited above.
If racism is not part of a society but is a characteristic of individuals who are “racist” or
“prejudiced”—that is, racism is a phenomenon operating at the individual level—then
(1) social institutions cannot be racist and (2)
studying racism is simply a matter of surveying the proportion of people in a society who
hold “racist” beliefs.
Orthodox Marxists (Cox 1948; Perlo 1975;
Szymanski 1983) and many neo-Marxists
(Miles 1993; Miles and Phizaclea 1984;
Solomos 1986) conceive of racism as an ideology that may affect members of the working class. Although the authors associated
with the institutionalist, internal colonialist,
and racial formation perspectives focus on
the ideological character of racism, they all
emphasize how this ideology becomes enmeshed or institutionalized in organizations
and social practices.
Racism is treated as a static phenomenon.
The phenomenon is viewed as unchanging;
that is, racism yesterday is like racism today.
Thus, when a society’s racial structure and
its customary racial practices are rearticulated, this rearticulation is characterized as
a decline in racism (Wilson 1978), a natural
process in a cycle (Park 1950), an example
of increased assimilation (Rex 1973, 1986),
or effective “norm changes” (Schuman et al.
1985). This limitation, which applies particularly to social psychologists and Marxist
scholars, derives from not conceiving of racism as possessing an independent structural
468
foundation. If racism is merely a matter of
ideas that has no material basis in contemporary society, then those ideas should be similar to their original configuration, whatever
that was. The ideas may be articulated in a
different context, but most analysts essentially believe that racist ideas remain the
same. For this reason, with notable exceptions (Kinder and Sears 1981; Sears 1988),
their attitudinal research is still based on responses to questions developed in the 1940s,
1950s, and 1960s.
AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW
ies when racial practices were overt (e.g.,
slavery and apartheid), but problems in the
analysis of racism arise in situations where
racial practices are subtle, indirect, or fluid.
For instance, many analysts have suggested
that in contemporary America racial practices are manifested covertly (Bonilla-Silva
and Lewis 1997; Wellman 1977) and racial
attitudes tend to be symbolic (Pettigrew
1994; Sears 1988). Therefore it is a waste of
time to attempt to detect “racism” by asking
questions such as, “How strongly would you
Analysts defining racism in an idealist object if a member of your family wanted to
manner view racism as “incorrect” or “irra- bring a Black friend home to dinner?””Also,
tional thinking”; thus they label “racists” many such questions were developed to meaas irrational and rigid. Because racism is sure the extent of racist attitudes in the popuconceived of as a belief with no real social lation during the Jim Crow era of race relabasis, it follows that those who hold racist tions; they are not suitable for the post-1960s
views must be irrational or stupid (Adorno period.
1950;Allport 1958; Santa Cruz 1977; SniderFurthermore, this emphasis on overt beman and Piazza 1993; for a critique see havior limits the possibility of analyzing raBlauner 1972 and Wellman 1977). This view cial phenomena in other parts of the world
allows for a tactical distinction between indi- such as Brazil, Cuba, and Puerto Rico where
viduals with the “pathology” and social ac- race relations do not have an overt character.
tors who are “rational” and racism-free. The The form of race relations—overt or coproblem with this rationalistic view is two- vert—depends on the pattern of racialization
fold. First, it misses the rational elements on that structures a particular society (Cox
which racialized systems originally were 1948; Harris 1964; Rex 1983; van den Berbuilt. Second, and more important, it neglects ghe 1967) and on how the process of racial
the possibility that contemporary racism still contestation and other social dynamics afhas a rational foundation. In this account, fects that pattern (see the following section).
contemporary racists are perceived as Archie
Contemporary racism is viewed as an exBunker-type individuals (Wellman 1977).
pression of “original sin”—as a remnant of
Among the alternative frameworks re- past historical racial situations. In the case
viewed here, only orthodox Marxism insists of the United States, some analysts argue that
on the irrational and imposed character of racism preceded slavery and/or capitalism
racism. Neo-Marxists and authors associated (Jordan 1968; Marable 1983; Robinson
with the institutionalist, internal colonialist, 1983). Others regard racism in the United
and racial formation perspectives insist, to States as the result of slavery (Glazer and
varying degrees, on the rationality of racism. Moynihan 1970). Even in promising new avNeo-Marxists (e.g., Bonacich, Wolpe, Hall) enues of research, such as that presented by
and authors in the racial formation tradition Roediger (1991) in The Wages of Whiteness,
(e.g., Omi and Winant) acknowledge the contemporary racism is viewed as one of the
short-term advantages that workers gain from “legacies of white workerism” (p. 176). By
racisni; the institutionalist and internal colo- considering racism as a legacy, all these ananial paradigms emphasize the systematic and lysts downplay the significance of its contemporary materiality or structure.
long-term character of these advantages.
Racism is understood as overt behavior.
Again the Marxist perspective shares this
Because the idealist approach regards racism limitation. Marxists believe that racism deas “irrational” and “rigid,” its manifestations veloped in the sixteenth century and has been
should be quite evident, usually involving used since then by capitalists or workers to
some degree of hostility. This does not
present serious analytical problems for the
” This question is used by NORC and has been
study of certain periods in racialized societ- employed by Schuman et al. (1985).
RETHINKING RACISM: TOWARD A STRUCTURAL INTERPRETATION
further their own class interests. All other
models recognize the historic significance of
this “discovery,” but associate contemporary
racial ideology with contemporary racially
based inequalities.
Racism is analyzed in a circular manner.
“If racism is defined as the behavior that results from the belief, its discovery becomes
ensnared in a circularity—racism is a belief
that produces behavior, which is itself racism” (Webster 1992:84). Racism is established by racist behavior, which itself is
proved by the existence of racism. This circularity results from not grounding racism in
social relations among the races. If racism,
viewed as an ideology, were seen as possessing a structural^ foundation, its examination
could be associated with racial practices
rather than with mere ideas and the problem
of circularity would be avoided.
RACIALIZED SOCIAL SYSTEMS:
AN ALTERNATIVE FRAMEWORK
FOR UNDERSTANDING RACIAL
PHENOMENA
Because all kinds of racial matters have been
explained as a product of racism, I propose
the more general concept of racialized social
systems as the starting point for an alternative framework. This term refers to societies
in which economic, political, social, and
ideological levels are partially structured by
the placement of actors in racial categories
or races. Races typically are identified by
their phenotype, but (as we see later) the selection of certain human traits to designate a
racial group is always socially rather than
biologically based.
These systems are structured partially by
race because modern social systems articu’ By structure I mean, following Whitmeyer
(1994), “the networks of (interactional) relationships among actors as well as the distributions of
socially meaningful characteristics of actors and
aggregates of actors” (p. 154). For similar but
more complex conceptions of the term, which are
relational and incorporate the agency of actors,
see Bourdieu (1984) and Sewell (1992). I reserve
the term material to refer to the economic, social,
political, or ideological rewards or penalties received by social actors for their participation
(whether willing, unwilling, or indifferent) in social structural arrangements.
469
late two or more forms of hierarchical patterns (Hall 1980; Williams 1990; Winant
1994).* Although processes of racialization
are always embedded in other structurations
(Balibar and Wallerstein 1991), they acquire
autonomy and have “pertinent effects”
(Poulantzas 1982) in the social system. This
implies that the phenomenon which is coded
as racism and is regarded as a free-floating
ideology in fact has a structural foundation.
In all racialized social systems the placement of people in racial categories involves
some form of hierarchy^ that produces definite social relations between the races. The
race placed in the superior position tends to
receive greater economic remuneration and
access to better occupations and/or prospects
in the labor market, occupies a primary posi-
* Some potentially useful conceptions about the
interaction of race, class, and gender (the primary
axes of social hierarchy in modern societies) are
Segura’s (1990) “triple oppression” and Essed’s
(1991) analysis of “gendered racism.” Also see
Andersen and Hill Collins (1995) and Fraser
(1989).
‘ This argument applies only to racialized social systems. In contrast, ethnic situations need
not be based on relations between superiors and
subordinates, as is the case between the Fur and
the Baggara in western Sudan (Barth 1969), the
various ethnic groups in Switzerland (Hunt and
Walker 1974), the Tungus and the Cossacks in
Siberia (Berry 1965), the Lake Zwai Laki and the
Arsi in Ethiopia (Knutson 1969), and certain
mountain tribes and the Thai in Laos (Izikowitz
1969). Certainly, ethnic situations can be conflictual and hierarchical, as illustrated by the
Tutsis and the Hutus in Rwanda or the conflict
between Serbians, Croatians, and Bosnians in
what was once Yugoslavia. The point is that ethnicity and race are different bases for group association. Ethnicity has a primarily sociocultural
foundation, and ethnic groups have exhibited tremendous malleability in terms of who belongs
(Barth 1969; Leach [1954] 1964); racial ascriptions (initially) are imposed externally to justify
the collective exploitation of a people and are
maintained to preserve status differences. Hence
scholars have pointed out that despite the similarities between race and ethnicity, they should be
viewed as producing different types of structurations (Balibar and Wallerstein 1991; Cox
1948; Rex 1973; van den Berghe 1967; Wilson
1973). On this point see Horowitz (1985),
Schermerhorn (1970), and Shibutani and Kwan
(1965).
470
tion in the political system, is granted higher
social estimation (e,g., is viewdd as “smarter”
or “better looking”), often has the license to
draw physical (segregation) as well as social
(racial etiquette) boundaries between itself
and other races, and receives what DuBois
(1939) calls a “psychological wage” (Marable 1983; Roediger 1991).* The totality of
these racialized social relations and practices
constitutes the racial structure of a society.
Although all racialized social systems are
hierarchical, the particular character of the
hierarchy, and thus of the racial structure, is
variable. For example, domination of Blacks
in the United States was achieved through
dictatorial means during slavery, but in the
post-civil rights period this domination has
been hegemonic (Omi and Winant 1994;
Winant 1994).’ Similarly, the racial practices
and mechanisms that have kept Blacks subordinated changed from overt and eminently
racist to covert and indirectly racist (BonillaSilva and Lewis 1997). The unchanging element throughout these stages is that Blacks’
life chances are significantly lower than those
of Whites, and ultimately a racialized social
order is distinguished by this difference in life
chances. Generally, the more dissimilar the
races’ life chances, the more racialized the
social system, and vice versa.
Insofar as the races receive different social
rewards at all levels, they develop dissimilar
objective interests, which can be detected in
their struggles to either transform or maintain a particular racial order. These interests
are collective rather than individual, are
based on relations between races rather than
on particular group needs, and are not structural but practical; that is, they are related to
concrete struggles rather than derived from
the location of the races in the racial structure. In other words, although the races’ interests can be detected from their practices,
they are not subjective and individual but
” Herbert Blumer was one of the first analysts
to make this argument about systematic rewards
received by the race ascribed the primary position in a racial order, Blumer (1955) summarized
these views in his essay “Reflections on Theory
of Race Relations,” Also see the works of Blaiock
(1967), Schermerhorn (1970), Shibutani and
Kwan (1965), and van den Berghe (1967),
^ Hegemonic means that domination is
achieved more through consent than by coercion.
AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW
collective and shaped by the field of real
practical alternatives, which is itself rooted
in the power struggles between the races.’°
Although the objective general interests of
races may ultimately lie in the complete
elimination of a society’s racial structure, its
array of alternatives may not include that
possibility. For instance, the historical
struggle against chattel slavery led not to the
development of race-free societies but to the
establishment of social systems with a different kind of racialization. Race-free societies were not among the available alternatives because the nonslave populations had
the capacity to preserve some type of racial
privilege. The historical “exceptions” occurred in racialized societies in which the
nonslaves’ power was almost completely superseded by that of the slave population.”
A simple criticism of the argument advanced so far would be that it ignores the internal divisions of the races along class and
gender lines. Such criticism, however, does
not deal squarely with the issue at hand. The
fact that not all members of the superordinate
race receive the same level of rewards and
(conversely) that not all members of the subordinate race or races are at the bottom of the
social order does not negate the fact that
races, as social groups, are in either a superordinate or a subordinate position in a social
system. Historically the racialization of social systems did not imply the exclusion of
other forms of oppression. In fact, racialization occurred in social formations also
structured by class and gender. Hence, in
these societies, the racial structuration of subjects is fragmented along class and gender
lines,’^ The important question—which inter'” Power is defined here as a racial group’s capacity to push for its racial interests in relation to
other races,
” I am referring to cases such as Haiti, Nonetheless, recent research has suggested that even
in such places, the abolition of slavery did not end
the racialized character of the social formation
(Trouillot 1990),
‘” Some authors have developed notions combining racial/ethnic positions with class, Gordon
(1964) developed the concept of “ethclass” but
assumed that this was a temporary phenomenon,
Geschwender (1977) transformed the notion into
the concept of race-class, defined as “a social collectivity comprised of persons who are simultaneously members of the same class and the same
RETHINKING RACISM: TOWARD A STRUCTURAL INTERPRETATION
ests move actors to struggle?—is historically
contingent and cannot be ascertained a priori
(Anthias and Yuval-Davis 1992; Wolpe
1988), Depending on the character of racialization in a social order, class interests may
take precedence over racial interests as they
do in contemporary Brazil, Cuba, and Puerto
Rico, In other situations, racial interests may
take precedence over class interests as in the
case of Blacks throughout U,S. history.
In general, the systemic salience of class
in relation to race increases when the economic, political, and social distance between
races decreases substantially. Yet this broad
argument generates at least one warning: The
narrowing of within-class differences between racial actors usually causes more
rather than less racial conflict, at least in the
short run, as the competition for resources
increases (Blaiock 1967; Olzak 1992), More
significantly, even when class-based conflict
becomes more salient in a social order, the
racial component survives until the races’ life
chances are equalized and the mechanisms
and social practices tbat produce those differences are eliminated. Hence societies in
which race has declined in significance, such
as Brazil, Cuba, and Mexico, still have a racial problem insofar as the racial groups have
different life chances.
Because racial actors are also classed and
gendered, analysts must control for class and
for gender to ascertain the material advantages enjoyed by a dominant race. In a racialized society such as ours, the independent
effects of race are assessed by analysts who
(1) compare data between Whites and nonWhites in the same class and gender positions, (2) evaluate the proportion as well as
the general character of the races’ participation in some domain of life, and (3) examine
racial data at all levels—social, political,
economic, and ideological—to ascertain the
general position of racial groups in a social
system.
The first of these procedures has become
standard practice in sociology. No serious
sociologist would present racial statistics
without controlling for gender and class (or
race” (p, 221; also see Barrera 1979:174-279),
Geschwender, however, views racial interests as
somewhat less “objective” and less “fundamental” than class interests.
471
at least the class of persons’ family of origin). By doing this, analysts assume they can
measure the unadulterated effects of “discrimination” manifested in unexplained “residuals” (Farley 1984, 1993; Farley and
Allen 1987). Despite its usefulness, however,
this technique provides only a partial account
of the “race effect” because (1) a significant
amount of racial data cannot be retrieved
through surveys and (2) the technique of
“controlling for” a variable neglects the obvious—why a group is over- or underrepresented in certain categories of the control
variables in the first place (Whatley and
Wright 1994). Moreover, these analysts presume that it is possible to analyze the amount
of discrimination in one domain (e,g,, income, occupational status) “without analyzing the extent to which discrimination also
affects the factors they hold constant” (Reich
1978:383), Hence to evaluate “race effects”
in any domain, analysts must attempt to
make sense of their findings in relation to a
race’s standing on other domains.
But what is the nature of races or, more
properly, of racialized social groups? Omi
and Winant (1986; also see Miles 1989) state
that races are the outcome of the racialization
process, which they define as “the extension
of racial meaning to a previously racially unclassified relationship, social practice or
group” (p. 64), Historically the classification
of a people in racial terms has been a highly
political act associated with practices such as
conquest and colonization, enslavement, peonage, indentured servitude, and, more recently, colonial and neocolonial labor immigration. Categories such as “Indians” and
“Negroes” were invented (Allen 1994; Berkhoffer 1978; Jordan 1968) in the sixteenth
and seventeenth centuries to justify the conquest and exploitation of various peoples.
The invention of such categories entails a
dialectical process of construction; that is,
the creation of a category of “other” involves
the creation of a category of “same,” If “Indians” are depicted as “savages,” Europeans
are characterized as “civilized”; if “Blacks”
are defined as natural candidates for slavery,
“Whites” are defined as free subjects (Gossett 1963; Roediger 1991, 1994; Todorov
1984), Yet although the racialization of
peoples was socially invented and did not
override previous forms of social distinction
472
based on class or gender, it did not lead to
imaginary relations but generated new forms
of human association with definite status differences. After the process of attaching
meaning to a “people” is instituted, race becomes a real category of group association
and identity.’^
Because racial classifications partially organize and limit actors’ life chances, racial
practices of opposition emerge. Regardless
of the form of racial interaction (overt, covert, or inert), races can be recognized in the
realm of racial relations and positions.
Viewed in this light, races are the effect of
racial practices of opposition (“we” versus
“them”) at the economic, political, social,
and ideological levels.”’
Races, as most social scientists acknowledge, are not biologically but socially determined categories of identity and group association.’^ In this regard, they are analogous
to class and gender (Amott and Matthaei
1991). Actors in racial positions do not occupy those positions because they are of X
or Y race, but because X or Y has been socially defined as a race. Actors’ phenotypical
(i.e., biologically inherited) characteristics,
such as skin tone and hair color and texture,
are usually, although not always (Barth 1969;
Miles 1993), used to denote racial distinctions. For example, Jews in many European
nations (Miles 1989, 1993) and the Irish in
England have been treated as racial groups
(Allen 1994). Also, Indians in the United
States have been viewed as one race despite
the tremendous phenotypical and cultural
variation among tribes. Because races are socially constructed, both the meaning and the
‘•^ This point has been stressed by many social
analysts since Barth’s (1969) crucial work conceiving of ethnicity as a form of social organization.
‘•* This last point is an extension of Poulantzas’s view on class. Races (as classes) are not
an “empirical thing”; they denote racialized social relations or racial practices at all levels
(Poulantzas 1982:67).
‘5 Weber ([1920] 1978) made one of the earliest statements of this view. He regarded race and
ethnicity as “presumed identities” in which the
actors attached subjective meanings to so-called
common traits. Leach ([1954] 1964), in his study
of the Kachin in highland Burma, was one of the
first social scientists to illustrate the malleability
of ethnic boundaries.
AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW
position assigned to races in the racial structure are always contested (Gilroy 1991).
What and who is to be Black or White or Indian reflects and affects the social, political,
ideological, and economic struggles between
the races. The global effects of these
struggles can change the meaning of the racial categories as well as the position of a
racialized group in a social formation.
This latter point is illustrated clearly by the
historical struggles of several “White ethnic”
groups in the United States in their efforts to
become accepted as legitimate Whites or
“Americans” (Litwack 1961; Roediger 1991;
Saxton 1990; Williams 1990). Neither lightskinned—nor, for that matter, darkskinned—immigrants necessarily came to
this country as members of race X or race Y.
Light-skinned Europeans, after brief periods
of being “not-yet White” (Roediger 1994),
became “White,” but they did not lose their
“ethnic” character. Their struggle for inclusion had specific implications: racial inclusion as members of the White community allowed Americanization and class mobility.
On the other hand, among dark-skinned immigrants from Africa, Latin America, and the
Caribbean, the struggle was to avoid classification as “Black.” These immigrants challenged the reclassification of their identity
for a simple reason: In the United States
“Black” signified a subordinate status in society. Hence many of these groups struggled
to keep their own ethnic or cultural identity,
as denoted in expressions such as “I am not
Black; I am Jamaican,” or “I am not Black; I
am Senegalese” (Kasinitz and FreidenbergHerbstein 1987; Rodrfguez 1991; Sutton and
Makiesky-Barrow 1987). Yet eventually
many of these groups resolved this contradictory situation by accepting the duality of
their social classification as Black in the
United States while retaining and nourishing
their own cultural or ethnic heritage—a heritage deeply influenced by African traditions.
Although the content of racial categories
changes over time through manifold processes and struggles, race is not a secondary
category of group association. The meaning
of Black and White, the “racial formation”
(Omi and Winant 1986), changes within the
larger racial structure. This does not mean
that the racial structure is immutable and
completely independent of the action of
RETHINKING RACISM: TOWARD A STRUCTURAL INTERPRETATION
racialized actors. It means only that the social relations between the races become institutionalized (forming a structure as well as
a culture) and affect their social life whether
individual members of the races want it or
not. In Barth’s words (1969), “Ethnic identity implies a series of constraints on the
kinds of roles an individual is allowed to play
[and] is similar to sex and rank, in that it constrains the incumbent in all his activities” (p.
17). For instance, free Blacks during the slavery period struggled to change the meaning
of “blackness,” and specifically to dissociate
it from slavery. Yet they could not escape the
larger racial structure that restricted their life
chances and their freedom (Berlin 1975;
Franklin 1974; Meir and Rudwick 1970).
The placement of groups of people in racial categories stemmed initially’* from the
interests of powerful actors in the social system (e.g., the capitalist class, the planter
class, colonizers). After racial categories
were used to organize social relations in a society, however, race became an independent
element of the operation of the social system
(Stone 1985).
Here I depart from analysts such as Jordan
(1968), Robinson (1983), and Miles (1989,
1993), who take the mere existence of a racial discourse as manifesting the presence of
a racial order. Such a position allows them to
speak of racism in medieval times (Jordan)
and to classify the antipeasant views of
French urbanites (Miles) or the prejudices of
the aristocracy against peasants in the Middle
Ages (Robinson) as expressions of racism. In
my view, we can speak of racialized orders
only when a racial discourse is accompanied
by social relations of subordination and
‘^ The motivation for racializing human relations may have originated in the interests of powerful actors, but after social systems are
racialized, all members of the dominant race participate in defending and reproducing the racial
structure. This is the crucial reason why Marxist
analysts (Cox 1948; Reich 1981) have not been
successful in analyzing racism. They have not
been able to accept the fact that after the phenomenon originated with the expansion of European
capitalism into the New World, it acquired a life
of its own. The subjects who were racialized as
belonging to the superior race, whether or not
they were members of the dominant class, became zealous defenders of the racial order.
473
superordination between the races. The available evidence suggests that racialized social
orders emerged after the imperialist expansion of Europe to the New World and Africa
(Boggs 1970; Cox 1948; Furnivall 1948;
Magubane 1990; E. Williams [1944] 1961;
R. Williams 1990).
What are the dynamics of racial issues in
racialized systems? Most important, after a
social formation is racialized, its “normal”
dynamics always include a racial component.
Societal struggles based on class or gender
contain a racial component because both of
these social categories are also racialized;
that is, both class and gender are constructed
along racial lines. In 1922, for example.
White South African workers in the middle
of a strike inspired by the Russian revolution
rallied under the slogan “Workers of the
world unite for a White South Africa.” One
of the state’s “concessions” to this “class”
struggle was the passage of the Apprenticeship Act of 1922, “which prevented Black
workers acquiring apprenticeships” (Ticktin
1991:26). In another example, the struggle of
women in the United States to attain their
civil and human rights has always been
plagued by deep racial tensions (Caraway
1991;Giddings 1984).
Nonetheless, some of the strife that exists
in a racialized social formation has a distinct
racial character; I call such strife “racial contestation”—the struggle of racial groups for
systemic changes regarding their position at
one or more levels. Such a struggle may be
social (Who can be here? Who belongs
here?), political (Who can vote? How much
power should they have? Should they be citizens?), economic (Who should work, and
what should they do? They are taking our
jobs!), or ideological (Black is beautiful! The
term designating people of African descent
in the United States has changed from Negro
to Black to African American).
Although much of this contestation is expressed at the individual level and is disjointed, sometimes it becomes collective and
general, and can effect meaningful systemic
changes in a society’s racial organization.
The form of contestation may be relatively
passive and subtle (e.g., in situations of fundamental overt racial domination, such as slavery and apartheid) or more active and more
overt (e.g., in quasi-democratic situations
474
such as the contemporary United States). As
a rule, however, fundamental changes in
racialized social systems are accompanied by
struggles that reach the point of overt protest.’^ This does not mean that a violent racially based revolution is the only way of accomplishing effective changes in the relative
position of racial groups. It is a simple extension of the argument that social systems and
their supporters must be “shaken” if fundamental transformations are to take place.’^
On this structural foundation rests the phenomenon labeled racism by social scientists.
I reserve the term racism (racial ideology)
for the segment of the ideological structure
of a social system that crystallizes racial notions and stereotypes. Racism provides the
rationalizations for social, political, and economic interactions between the races (Bobo
1988). Depending on the particular character
of a racialized social system and on the
struggles of the subordinated races, racial
ideology may be developed highly (as in
apartheid), or loosely (as in slavery), and its
content can be expressed in overt or covert
terms (Bobo and Smith forthcoming;
Jackman 1994; Kinder and Sears 1981; Pettigrew 1994; Sears 1988).
Although racism or racial ideology originates in race relations, it acquires relative
autonomy in the social system and performs
practical functions.” In Gilroy’s (1991)
words, racial ideology “mediates the world
of agents and the structures which are created by their social praxis” (p. 17; also see
Omi and Winant 1994; van Dijk 1984, 1987,
AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW
1993). Racism crystallizes the changing
“dogma” on which actors in the social system operate (Gilroy 1991), and becomes
“common sense” (Omi and Winant 1994); it
provides the rules for perceiving and dealing
with the “other” in a racialized society. In the
United States, for instance, because racial
notions about what Blacks and Whites are or
ought to be pervade their encounters. Whites
still have difficulty in dealing with Black
bankers, lawyers, professors, and doctors
(Cose 1993; Graham 1995). Thus, although
racist ideology is ultimately false, it fulfills a
practical role in racialized societies.
At this point it is possible to sketch the elements of the alternative framework presented here. First, racialized social systems
are societies that allocate differential economic, political, social, and even psychological rewards to groups along racial lines; lines
that are socially constructed. After a society
becomes racialized, a set of social relations
and practices based on racial distinctions develops at all societal levels. I designate the
aggregate of those relations and practices as
the racial structure of a society. Second,
races historically are constituted according to
the process of racialization; they become the
effect of relations of opposition between
racialized groups at all levels of a social formation. Third, on the basis of this structure,
there develops a racial ideology (what analysts have coded as racism). This ideology is
not simply a “superstructural” phenomenon
(a mere reflection of the racialized system),
but becomes the organizational map that
guides actions of racial actors in society. It
‘^ This argument is not new. Analysts of the becomes as real as the racial relations it orracial history of the United States have always ganizes. Fourth, most struggles in a racialpointed out that most of the significant historical ized social system contain a racial compochanges in this country’s race relations were ac- nent, but sometimes they acquire and/or excompanied by some degree of overt violence hibit a distinct racial character. Racial con(Button 1989; Cruse 1968; Franklin 1974; Mar- testation is the logical outcome of a society
able 1983).
with a racial hierarchy. A social formation
“* This point is important in literature on revo- that includes some form of racialization will
lutions and democracy. On the role of violence in
always exhibit some form of racial contestathe establishment of bourgeois democracies, see
Moore (1966). On the role of violence in social tion. Finally, the process of racial contestamovements leading to change, see Piven and tion reveals the different objective interests
of the races in a racialized system.
Cloward (1979) and Tilly (1978).
” The notion of relative autonomy comes from
the work of Poulantzas (1982) and implies that
the ideological and political levels in a society are
partially autonomous in relation to the economic
level; that is, they are not merely expressions of
the economic level.
CONCLUSION
My central argument is that racism, as defined by mainstream social scientists to con-
RETHINKING RACISM: TOWARD A STRUCTURAL INTERPRETATION
475
sist only of ideas, does not provide adequate
theoretical foundation for understanding racial phenomena. I suggest that until a structural framework is developed, analysts will
be entangled in ungrounded ideological
views of racism. Lacking a structural view,
they will reduce racial phenomena to a derivation of the class structure (as do Marxist
interpreters) or will view these phenomena as
the result of an irrational ideology (as do
mainstream social scientists). Although others have attempted to develop a structural
understanding of racial matters (such as authors associated with the institutionalist, internal colonial, and racial formation perspectives) and/or to write about racial matters as
structural (Bobo and Smith forthcoming;
Cose 1993; Essed 1991; Feagin and Feagin
1993; Page 1996; van Dijk 1993), they have
failed to elaborate a framework that extends
beyond their critique of mainstream views.
In the alternative framework developed
here, I suggest that racism should be studied
from the viewpoint of racialization. I contend
that after a society becomes racialized,
racialization develops a life of its own.^° Although it interacts with class and gender
structurations in the social system, it becomes an organizing principle of social relations in itself (Essed 1991; Omi and Winant
1986; Robinson 1983; van Dijk 1987). Race,
as most analysts suggest, is a social construct, but that construct, like class and gender, has independent effects in social life.
After racial stratification is established, race
becomes an independent criterion for vertical hierarchy in society. Therefore different
races experience positions of subordination
and superordination in society and develop
different interests.
The alternative framework for studying racial orders presented here has the following
advantages over traditional views of racism:
Racial phenomena are regarded as the
“normal” outcome of the racial structure of
a society. Thus we can account for all racial
manifestations. Instead of explaining racial
phenomena as deriving from other structures
changes in racism are explained rather than
described. Changes are due to specific
struggles at different levels among the races,
resulting from differences in interests. Such
changes may transform the nature of racialization and the global character of racial relations in the system (the racial structure).
Therefore, change is viewed as a normal
component of the racialized system.
The framework of racialization allows
analysts to explain overt as well as covert
racial behavior. The covert or overt nature of
racial contacts depends on how the process
of racialization is manifested; this in turns
depends on how race originally was articulated in a social formation and on the process
of racial contestation. This point implies that
rather than conceiving of racism as a universal and uniformly orchestrated phenomenon,
analysts should study “historically-specific
racisms” (Hall 1980:336). This insight is not
new; Robert Park (1950) and Oliver Cox
(1948) and Marvin Harris (1964) described
varieties of “situations of race relations” with
distinct forms of racial interaction.
Racially motivated behavior, whether or
not the actors are conscious of it, is regarded as “rational”—that is, as based on
the races’ different interests.^^ This framework accounts for Archie Bunker-type racial
behavior as well as for more “sophisticated”
varieties of racial conduct. Racial phenomena are viewed as systemic; therefore all actors in the system participate in racial affairs.
Some members of the dominant racial group
tend to exhibit less virulence toward members of the subordinated races because they
have greater control over the form and the
outcome of their racial interactions. When
•^” Historian Eugene Genovese (1971) makes a
similar argument. Although he still regards racism as an ideology, he states that once it “arises
it alters profoundly the material reality and in fact
becomes a partially autonomous feature of that
reality” (p. 340).
^’ Actions by the Ku Klux Klan have an unmistakably racial tone, but many other actions
(choosing to live in a suburban neighborhood,
sending one’s children to a private school, or opposing government intervention in hiring policies) also have racial undertones.
or from racism (conceived of as a free-floating ideology), we can trace cultural, political, economic, social, and even psychological racial phenomena to the racial organization of that society.
The changing nature of what analysts label “racism” is explained as the normal
outcome of racial contestation in a racial-
ized social system. In this framework,
476
they cannot control that interaction—as in
the case of revolts, general threats to Whites,
Blacks moving into “their” neighborhood—
they behave much like other members of the
dominant race.
The reproduction of racial phenomena in
contemporary societies is explained in this
framework, not by reference to a long-distant past, but in relation to its contemporary
structure. Because racism is viewed as systemic (possessing a racial structure) and as
organized around the races’ different interests, racial aspects of social systems today
are viewed as fundamentally related to hierarchical relations between the races in those
systems. Elimination of the racialized character of a social system entails the end of
racialization, and hence of races altogether.
This argument clashes with social scientists’
most popular policy prescription for “curing”
racism, namely education. This “solution” is
the logical outcome of defining racism as a
belief. Most analysts regard racism as a matter of individuals subscribing to an irrational
view, thus the cure is educating them to realize that racism is wrong. Education is also
the choice “pill” prescribed by Marxists for
healing workers from racism. The alternative
theorization offered here implies tbat because the phenomenon bas structural consequences for the races, tbe only way to “cure”
society of racism is by eliminating its systemic roots. Whether tbis can be accomplished democratically or only through revolutionary means is an open question, and one
that depends on tbe particular racial structure
of the society in question.
A racialization framework accounts for
the ways in which racial/ethnic stereotypes
emerge, are transformed, and disappear.
Racial stereotypes are crystallized at the
ideological level of a social system. Tbese
images ultimately indicate (although in distorted ways) and justify tbe stereotyped
group’s position in a society. Stereotypes
may originate out of (1) material realities or
conditions endured by the group, (2) genuine ignorance about the group, or (3) rigid,
distorted views on tbe group’s physical, cultural, or moral nature. Once tbey emerge,
however, stereotypes must relate—although
not necessarily fit perfectly—to the group’s
true social position in tbe racialized system
if they are to perform tbeir ideological func-
AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW
tion. Stereotypes that do not tend to reflect a
group’s situation do not work and are bound
to disappear: For example, notions of the
Irish as stupid or of Jews as athletically talented have all but vanished since the 1940s,
as tbe Irish moved up the educational ladder
and Jews gained access to multiple routes to
social mobility. Generally, then, stereotypes
are reproduced because tbey reflect the
group’s distinct position and status in society. As a corollary, racial or ethnic notions
about a group disappear only when the
group’s status mirrors that of the dominant
racial or ethnic group in tbe society.
The framework developed bere is not a
universal theory explaining racial phenomena in societies. It is intended to trigger a serious discussion of how race shapes social
systems. Moreover, tbe important question of
bow race interacts and intersects witb class
and gender has not yet been addressed satisfactorily. Provisionally I argue that a
nonfunctionalist reading of the concept of
social system may give us clues for comprehending societies “structured in dominance”
(Hall 1980). If societies are viewed as systems tbat articulate different structures (organizing principles on whicb sets of social
relations are systematically patterned), it is
possible to claim that race—as well as gender—has botb individual and combined (interaction) effects in society.
To test tbe usefulness of racialization as a
theoretical basis for researcb, we must perform comparative work on racialization in
various societies. One of the main objectives
of this comparative work should be to determine whether societies bave specific mecbanisms, practices, and social relations tbat
produce and reproduce racial inequality at all
levels—tbat is, whether they possess a racial
structure. I believe, for example, tbat the persistent inequality experienced by Blacks and
other racial minorities in the United States
today is due to the continued existence of a
racial structure (Bonilla-Silva and Lewis
1997). In contrast to race relations in tbe Jim
Crow period, however, racial practices that
reproduce racial inequality in contemporary
America (1) are increasingly covert, (2) are
embedded in normal operations of institutions, (3) avoid direct racial terminology, and
(4) are invisible to most Wbites. By examining whether otber countries bave practices
RETHINKING RACISM: TOWARD A STRUCTURAL INTERPRETATION
and mechanisms that account for the persistent inequality experienced by tbeir racial
minorities, analysts could assess the usefulness of the framework I bave introduced.
Eduardo Bonilla-Silva is Assistant Professor of
Sociology and African American Studies at the
University of Michigan. He is working on two
books, one titled Squatters, Politics, and State
Responses; The Political Economy of Squatters
in Puerto Rico, and the other The New Racism:
Toward an Analysis of the U.S. Racial Structure,
1960s-1990s. Currently he is exploring post-civil
rights White ideology in an article titled “‘I Am
Not a Racist But. . .’: An Examination of White
Racial Attitudes in the Post-Civil Rights Period. ”
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