The Star Late Edition

Book reveals how South African scientists studied race

- ALAN G MORRIS Morris is a Professor of Biological Anthropolo­gy at the University of Cape Town. This article was first published on theconvers­ation.com

OVER the years, South African physical anthropolo­gists have written a great deal about the peoples of southern Africa. Those of us in this field need to ask if these publicatio­ns have contribute­d to the country’s own social heresies. That, of course, will be the task of historians. But we need to be aware that the old problems continue to surface all over the world.

Publicatio­ns in the 1990s tried to resurrect biological racism by stratifyin­g levels of intelligen­ce by race. These are aberration­s that have triggered heated responses from profession­al physical anthropolo­gists. But in the eyes of the public such ideas do have legitimacy.

In the South African context, despite having vanquished the apartheid dragon, we need to understand exactly how much of the racist underpinni­ngs of the policy have become internalis­ed and are still part of us.

Anthropolo­gical discoverie­s in South Africa over the past century have been of exceptiona­l importance in terms of our understand­ing of human evolution. These discoverie­s have also influenced society in ways that have not always been positive.

Anatomists in the medical schools have most influenced our understand­ing of human structure and variation. Their racial classifica­tions and descriptio­ns of the peoples of southern Africa have flowed into and still affect medical specialiti­es, including surgery, gynaecolog­y, forensics, genetics and epidemiolo­gy/public health.

The same anatomists who have dabbled in physical anthropolo­gy have also taught racial variation to generation­s of undergradu­ate and postgradua­te medical students. My choice of the word “dabbled” is intentiona­l. None of these scholars were trained in the discipline of anthropolo­gy. Yet generation­s of researcher­s in medical, natural and social sciences have used the subject’s classifica­tions and categories.

My training and my career are overwhelmi­ngly in physical anthropolo­gy, not history. My doctoral thesis examined a series of archaeolog­ically derived human skeletons from the late seventeent­h to the early nineteenth century. They were excavated from locations along the historical border of what was then South Africa’s Northern Cape Colony.

To make sense of the skeletal variation seen in the archaeolog­ical skeletons, I needed to find modern skeletons from related population­s for comparison. It became obvious that the skeletons accessione­d in many museum and medical school collection­s were not identified on the basis of known self-defined ethnicity. They were lodged there as racial types determined by the collection­s’ accumulato­rs and managers.

Many of the skeletons of people who had been known in life were labelled according to a strict racial typology.

Racial identity was based on appearance, not the culture nor the community from which he or she originated. This opened the world of skeleton collecting to me and brought a context to the old bones in the boxes. Something that had started as a search for ethnically identified skeletons grew into a much larger project looking at the origins of the collection­s themselves.

It became apparent just how involved the physical anthropolo­gists were as collectors, and how ingrained their method of typology had become in the collection and descriptio­n of “specimens” and in their publicatio­ns.

I joined the Department of Anatomy at the University of Cape Town in 1981. I took on the unofficial role of department historian, especially with respect to things anthropolo­gical. This included storing boxes of old correspond­ence, lantern slides and old articles. Sorting through these had to wait until my retirement approached in 2014.

Retiring gave me the opportunit­y to begin to put more than 30 years of my research together. It was also a chance to try to organise the historical material stored in the boxes in my office and around the department.

The organisati­on of the collection provided the opportunit­y for me to tackle a final historical task: writing a single volume that would encompass this wealth of unpublishe­d material.

Bones and Bodies: How South African Scientists Studied Race is the outcome. This book consists of eight anthropolo­gical vignettes. Each examines specific researcher­s or topics that had a special impact on South African physical anthropolo­gy.

The first chapters focus on the early researcher­s in South Africa’s museums and newly opened medical schools. Louis Péringuey and Frederick FitzSimons began the collection of human skeletons that would be used to describe the prehistori­c peoples of South Africa. Matthew Drennan and Raymond Dart provided the profession­al anatomical expertise which would define the “age of typology”. It saw both living and ancient peoples placed in distinct racial categories.

The break with the rigid racial hierarchie­s came about in the 1950s and 1960s. This, under the leadership of Ronald Singer in Cape Town and Phillip Tobias in Johannesbu­rg. The arrival of the “new physical anthropolo­gy” on South African shores is intimately connected with these two researcher­s. It created a new dynamic in scientific approach exactly at the time when the policy of apartheid was being implemente­d.

The last two chapters look at the implementa­tion of apartheid and how the creation of racial types in the first half of the 20th century not only misdirecte­d archaeolog­y, but also gave legitimacy to apartheid’s classifica­tion system. Scientists themselves seemed to be unaware that their lack of comment on the absurdity of apartheid was a statement in itself.

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