race detractor

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From race +‎ detractor.

Noun[edit]

race detractor (plural race detractors)

  1. One who considers human races, or socially current typologies of human races, social constructs without sound foundations in biology.
    • 2002, Francisco Valdes & Jerome McCristal Culp & Angela P. Harris, "Battles Waged, Won, and Lost: Critical Race Theory at the Turn of the Millennium" (introduction), in Francisco Valdes & Jerome McCristal Culp & Angela P. Harris (eds.), Crossroads, Directions and A New Critical Race Theory, Temple University Press, →ISBN, page 5.
      Rather than become distracted or disheartened by the attacks of critical race detractors, this book shows that generations of scholars and activists have kept busy advancing CRT's original agenda and extending its antisubordination reach and insights.
    • 2016, Michel Tibayrenc, “The Race/Ethnic Debate: An Outsider's View”, in Michel Tibayrenc, Francisco J. Ayala, editors, On Human Nature: Biology, Psychology, Ethics, Politics, and Religion, Academic Press, →ISBN, page 635:
      When race is restricted to the biological viewpoint, two opposite positions are encountered: (1) race detractors, who believe race is a pure social concept and has no biological reality and (2) race realists (Malik, 2012), who believe race has some biological reality, is not only a mere vision of the mind, and could be a usual proxy for biomedical studies.
    Antonym: race realist
  2. (historical) One who believes black people are racially inferior in intellectual ability.
    • 1925 March, Winthroop D. Lane, “Ambushed in the City”, in Survey Graphic: Harlem, Mecca of the New Negro, volume VI, number 6, page 693:
      That is the pet formula of pseudo-scientific race detractors. The Negro has sufficiently proved — and this number of Survey Graphic is only further proof — that, given opportunities, he can rise to any heights.
    • 1974, Robert L. Harris, The Free Black Response to American Racism, 1790-1863, Northwestern University, page 153:
      Race detractors argued that no amount of effort or change of circumstance could enhance the intellectual capacity of blacks.
    • 2000, Joanne K., Grant Harrison, The Life and Times of Irvine Garland Penn, Xlibris, →ISBN, page 97:
      Women are cited for their dedicated church work and their business acumen, an ability that race detractors felt Black women lacked.