Ebook
Chapter 1: Eurocentrism, Race, and the Production of History
Chapter 3: History, Race, and Textbooks: Performing the Evasion of Power
Epilogue: ‘History Matters’. And Yet…
Marta Araújo and Silvia Maeso offer a unique critical lens on Eurocentrism. Analyzing Portuguese school history books as "racial texts," they dissect the paradigmatic discursive assumptions of race and power in prevailing knowledge formation regarding Europe and is others, embedded ideas of European racial ascendancy and inferiorization, racially ascribed power, and dehumanization. Araújo and Maeso thus offer a timely and significant analysis of Eurocentrism in the spirit of race critical theory.
What exactly is Eurocentrism, and why does it matter? Eschewing easy definitions, this book embarks on a wide-ranging examination of the practices of knowing and narrating, silencing and forgetting which have sustained and legitimized a colonial and racist world order over five centuries. Araújo and Maeso extend existing debates by carefully distinguishing between conventional notions of Eurocentrism as 'bias' and racism as 'prejudice', and the transformatory implications of an understanding of Eurocentrism as an enduring and ubiquitous practice of knowledge and power. Treating history textbooks, pedagogical discussions, curriculum reforms and public commemorations as political and racial texts, the authors elaborate a profound and very concrete interrogation of Eurocentrism as it is reproduced in institutionalized activities of knowledge production.
This book once again reveals Marta Araújo and Silvia Rodríguez Maeso as bold, imaginative and creative scholars. They provide a succinct and insightful review of key works that address the literature on Eurocentrism and racism. They challenge the assumption that Europe has emerged as an autonomous entity and they problematize the centrality of Nazism and Holocaust in current approaches to ‘race’ and history teaching since the 1940s. At the same time they illuminate the many difficulties to be found in textbooks sanctioned by the Portuguese state as it tries to circumvent discussion of ‘race’ in teaching the history of Portugal. In this way, they expose how Portuguese efforts are symptomatic of the master narratives to be found in nations across the European Union: namely, relentless efforts to develop a master narrative that links the past to the present by evading ‘race’. This book is a major addition to the corpus of literature in the context of the world racial order. It should be read widely.
Marta Araújo is senior researcher at the Centre for Social Studies, University of Coimbra.
Silvia Rodríguez Maeso is senior researcher and lecturer at the Centre for Social Studies, University of Coimbra.