by Alys Eve Weinbaum
about Alys Eve Weinbaum
Alys Eve Weinbaum is Associate Professor of English at the University of Washington-Seattle. She is the author of Wayward Reproductions: Genealogies of Race and Nation in Transatlantic Modern Thought and is completing a book titled The Afterlife of Slavery: Human Reproduction in Biocapitalism.
Nation
“Nation” has been in use in the English language since the fourteenth century, when it was first deployed to designate groups and populations. Although the concept of “race” was not well defined in this period, the _Oxford English Dictionary_ (_OED_) retrospectively refers to such groups and populations as “racial” in character. In the modern period, the _OED_ continues, the meaning of “nation” came to refer to large aggregates of people closely associated through a combination of additional factors, including common language, politics, culture, history, and occupation of the same territory. Though it appears that an initial racial connection among nationals was later supplanted by a widened range of associating factors, the early understanding of “nation” as based in race and “common descent” remains central to discussions of the term to this day, either as a retrospective imposition of the sort orchestrated by the _OED_ or as a “natural” grounding. An important contribution of American studies and cultural studies has been to interrogate race as a description and sometimes a synecdoche for nation and to insist that an uncritical conflation of race and nation constitutes a pressing political and theoretical problem. Indeed, as numerous scholars argue, ideas of race and racist...