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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4 page paper examines an article by Michael Omi on race. The paper reviews the article while discussing biological and social components of the definition of race. The changing nature of how race is viewed in society is highlighted. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA646Omi.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
divided society. At the same time, some see these issues as meaningless because the idea of race is meaningless. People are all human begins. They are all of the same
species, and the variations in respect to supposed racial variances are not all that great. In fact, sometimes it is difficult to distinguish what racial group someone is aligned with.
Michael Omi writes about this very issue in his chapter entitled "The Changing Meaning of Race." He is a professor, with an advanced degree in sociology, who focuses on race
and race relations. He has written extensively about this topic. This author does seem to be credible and in reading this article at least, there is a sense that he
is quite logical as well. The article employs reason and examines both sides of the issue. This is a topic to which a lot of emotion is attached. Some people
have been raised in racist families and others have simply been born to be proud of a unique racial heritage. Yet, despite the fact that many people are attached to
the concept of race, and their own identity may be attached to race or ethnicity, Omi challenges old notions. Michael Omi (2001) begins the chapter entitled "The Changing Meaning of
Race" by examining the 1997 Presidents Initiative on Race that was held in 1997. He considers that race is not something that is biological, but it is something that is
actually a socially defined phenomenon. Still, he notes that race is often defined with the use of scientific or biological attributes. In other words, people believe that race is something
defined by biology, even though the consensus amongst scientists is that it is not. The author sees race as controversial and "subject to multiple determinations" (Omi, 2001, p.244). Omi (2001)
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