학술논문

Neanderthal and the fossilization of the Third World.
Document Type
Article
Author
Source
Social Studies of Science (Sage Publications, Ltd.); Jun2021, Vol. 51 Issue 3, p439-462, 24p
Subject
Developing countries
Neanderthals
Fossilization
Administration of British colonies
Investment bankers
Caste discrimination
South Asia
Language
ISSN
03063127
Abstract
Neanderthal is the quintessential scientific Other. In the late nineteenth century gentlemen-scientists, including business magnates, investment bankers and lawmakers with interest in questions of human and human societal development, framed Europe's Neanderthal and South Asia's indigenous Negritos as close evolutionary kin. Simultaneously, they explained Neanderthal's extinction as the consequence of an inherent backwardness in the face of fair-skinned, steadily-progressing newcomers to ancient Europe who behaved in ways associated with capitalism. This racialization and economization of Neanderthal helped bring meaning and actual legal reality to Negritos via the British Raj's official 'schedules of backward castes and tribes'. It also helped justify the Raj's initiation of market-oriented reforms in order to break a developmental equilibrium deemed created when fair-skinned newcomers to ancient South Asia enslaved Negritos in an enduring caste system. Neanderthal was integral to the scientism behind the British construction of caste, and contributed to India's becoming a principal 'Third World' target of Western structural adjustment policies as continuation of South Asia's 'evolution assistance'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]