The cart before the horse
by
kati
08/27/2008, 1:44 PM #
I too am disappointed by Saletan’s article but I am heartened by all the excellent posts debunking his views.
The only thing I might add is that Mr. Saletan (many of whose other articles I did like very much) has a problem with classification. Race comes to us as a socially and violently constructed identity, so that it becomes an existential, a lived reality. But it is not a biological one.
The fact that certain genetic traits correspond to specific reactions to medical treatment shows that the classification should be based on those traits rather than on the previously socially imagined ones. If some researchers interpret their results on the basis of race this only shows that they are still prisoners of the racialized social perception they were brought up with. For instance, people with smaller eyes have a greater tendency to suffer from narrow angle glaucoma, but does this make them a race? Of course not because they have not been socially defined as a "race."
In the US we still have the legacy of the "one drop rule" enforced during slavery and segregation times. One drop of an imaginary black blood made you a member of the black "race." This seems to me to have remained a given, or to borrow the sociologist Weber’s expression, an invisible iron cage, distorting Saletan’s and others perception of "race," genetics and medicine.