RACE LITERACY QUIZ What differences make a difference? The Race Literacy Quiz was developed by California Newsreel, in association with the Association of American Colleges and Universities. 1. Humans have approximately 30,000 genes. On average, how many genes separate all members of one race from all members of another race? A. None B. 1 C. 23 D. 142 E. 1008 F. We don't know 2. Which characteristic did the ancient Greeks believe most distinguished them from "barbarians"? A. Religion B. Skin color C. Language D. Dress E. Hairiness 3. In Medieval Europe (circa 1300-1400), Ethiopians were looked upon as: A. Savages B. Saviors C. Barbarians D. Infidels E. Negroes 4. Members of a race can be identified by their: A. Blood group B. Skin color C. Ancestry D. Genes E. None of the above F. All of the above 5. Skin color correlates most closely with: A. Hair form B. IQ C. Risk for sickle cell, Tay Sachs and other genetic diseases D. Geographic latitude E. Continent of ancestral origin F. Jumping and sprinting ability 6. When Jamestown colonist John Rolfe and his new wife Pocahontas traveled to the Court of London in 1619, it caused a scandal because: A. An Englishman had married an Indian B. John Rolfe had cuckolded General John Smith, the leader of the colony C. Pocahontas, a princess, married beneath her station by wedding a commoner D. Londoners had never seen an Indian before E. A Christian had married a heathen 7. The rise of the idea of white supremacy was tied most directly to: A. Indian removal B. Slavery C. The Declaration of Independence D. The U.S. Constitution E. Ancient Greece 8. Which group has the most genetic variation? A. Humans B. Chimpanzees C. Penguins D. Fruit flies E. Elephants 9. Which two populations are most likely, on average, to be genetically similar? A. Italians and Ethiopians B. Senegalese and Kenyans C. Italians and Swedes D. Chinese and Lakota (Sioux) E. Saudi Arabians and Ethiopians 10. Most human genetic variation can be found: A. Within any local population, for example, among Zulus, or among Hmong B. Between two populations on the same continent, for example between Irish and Poles C. Between two populations on different continents, for example between Koreans and Zulus D. Between any two continents, for example, between Africa and Asia E. Between tall people and short people 11. Which continent has the greatest human genetic diversity? A. Europe B. Asia C. Africa D. North America E. South America 12. Who was the first American public figure to suggest, albeit "as a suspicion only," that black people might be inherently inferior to whites? A. Thomas Jefferson B. Sir Walter Raleigh C. George Washington D. Robert E. Lee E. Capt. John Smith, founder of the Jamestown colony 13. Which of the following was NOT an important reason why African slavery first took root in North America: A. As non-Christians, they had no legal protections B. They were skilled semi-tropical farmers C. The supply of indentured servants from Europe was becoming unreliable D. They were deemed innately inferior E. They couldn't easily run away 14. Which was NOT introduced to Indians by whites? A. An Indian identity B. Democracy C. Identity by "blood quantum" D. Horses E. Measles ANSWER KEY 1. A. None There are no characteristics, no traits, not even one gene that distinguish all members of one so-called race from all members of another race. 2. C. Language The word barbarian comes from the Greek word "bar-bar," for someone who stutters, is unintelligible, or does not speak Greek. The Greeks, like most ancient peoples, did not attribute much meaning to physical appearance. In ancient Greece, language was the difference that mattered, because it indicated who was not Greek. Some historians believe that the first to be labeled barbarian were the Scythians of circa 500 B.C., who lived northeast of the Black Sea and were very fair skinned. Ideas of 'race' did not exist during antiquity. 3. B. Saviors In medieval Europe, religion mattered most, not physical appearance. At the time, Christian Europe was at war with the Moslem Empire. Europe looked towards a mythical Christian Ethiopian kingdom, led by the fabled priest-king Prester John, to rescue them from the infidels. Theories of race didn't emerge until the late 18th and early 19th centuries. 4. E. None of the above There are no traits, no characteristics, not even one gene that is present in all members of one so-called race and absent in another. The A, B, and O blood groups can be found in all the world's peoples (the percentage of Estonians and Papua New Guineans with A, B, and O blood are almost exactly identical). Skin color tends to correlate with the earth's geographic latitude not race; sub-Saharan Africans, the Dravidians and Tamils of southern Asia, and Melanesians from the Pacific all have very dark skin. Ancestry is difficult to trace; we all have two parents, four grandparents, etc. If you could trace your family back 30 generations, slightly more than 1,000 years, you'd find one billion ancestors. 5. D. Geographic latitude Skin color tends to correspond with ultra-violet radiation from the sun and hence latitude. People with ancestors from the tropics typically have darker skin while those further north have lighter skin. Sub-Saharan Africans, Asian Indians, Aboriginal Australians and Melanesians all have dark skin. But skin color really is only skin deep. Most traits are inherited independently from one another. The genes influencing skin color have nothing to do with those influencing hair form, eye shape, and blood type, let alone the very complex traits we value such as intelligence, musical ability or athletic ability. Genetic diseases are inherited through families, not race. Sickle cell, for example, confers resistance to malaria. It occurs in people whose ancestors came from where malaria was once common: the Mediterranean, Arabia, Turkey, southern Asia and western and central Africa - but not southern Africa. The presence of sickle cell is not an indicator of race but of having an ancestor from a malarial region. 6. C. Pocahontas, a princess, married beneath her station by wedding a commoner 17th century England was a very hierarchical, feudal society where people's class status was fixed at birth. Status was so important that laws regulated the clothing people could wear so they couldn't "pass" as another class. When John Rolfe took his new bride Pocahontas (who had converted to Christianity) back with him to London in 1617, the English had not yet developed the racial ideology that later justified their taking of Indian lands. But it was unthinkable that royalty would marry a commoner. 7. C. The Declaration of Independence Ironically, it was freedom, not slavery, that gave rise to modern theories of race. Until the Revolutionary period, slavery was an unquestioned "fact of life." It was only when Americans proclaimed the radical new idea that "all men are created equal" that slavery was first challenged as immoral. As historian Barbara Fields notes, the new idea of race helped explain why some people could be denied the rights and freedoms that others took for granted. 8. D. Fruit flies Fruit flies have been around for a very long time but they also have a short life span, so lots of genetic mutations have accumulated over many generations. In contrast, modern humans are one of the most genetically similar of all species. On average, only one of every 1,000 nucleotides (the "letters" that make up our DNA) differ one individual from another. This is because we are a relatively young species (approximately 150,000 - 200,000 years old). We simply haven't been around long enough to accumulate much genetic variation. Also, humans have always moved, mixed and mated, further homogenizing our gene pool. Beneath the skin, we're all very similar. 9. E. Saudi Arabians and Ethiopians Populations that live near each other geographically tend to be genetically more alike than populations that live far apart. That's because they are more likely to have intermixed in the recent past and therefore share more genes. So even though Senegalese and Kenyans or Italians and Swedes are traditionally placed in the same "races," they live farther apart from each other and have had less contact and intermixing than Saudis and Ethiopians. 10. A. Within a local population 85%, or almost all human variation, can be found within any single local population, whether it's Malay, Irish, Zulus or Koreans. There is FAR more variation within groups than between groups. This means that there may be as many - or more - genetic differences between two random Koreans as between a random Korean and a Zulu. On average, approximately 94% of all genetic variation can be found within any continental area. 11. C. Africa We are all Africans. Modern humans (Homo sapien sapiens) originated in Africa, and we spent most of our evolution as a species together there. Some modern humans first left Africa 50,000 - 70,000 years ago and spread out around the world. All the other populations of the world can be seen as a subset of Africans. Every human genetic trait found elsewhere can also be found in Africa, with the exception of relatively few recent variations favored by the environment, genetic drift, or sexual selection - such as light skin. 12. A. Thomas Jefferson Thomas Jefferson was the first prominent American to speculate that black people might be innately inferior to Europeans. Until then, most Enlightenment figures believed that differences between groups were not inborn but due to environmental factors. It wasn't until Jefferson introduced the radical new ideas of liberty and equality that slavery had to be justified and prejudices against the enslaved began to crystallize into a doctrine of white supremacy. American freedom and the idea of innate racial difference were born together. Historian Barbara Fields calls them "Siamese twins." 13. D. They were deemed innately inferior Throughout much of history, societies have enslaved people, often as a result of conquest, war or even debt. People were not enslaved because they were first deemed inferior. African slaves were well-suited to labor in North America: unlike the Indians, they were resistant to European diseases; they couldn't easily run away; they were not Christians (and hence unprotected by English law); and they were skilled semi-tropical farmers. Finally, in the late 17th century, African slaves became available in large numbers just as the original labor force on Virginia's tobacco plantations - English indentured servants - began to rebel and immigration from England slowed. Over time, the degradation of slavery became identified with blackness, giving white Americans the idea that Africans were a fundamentally different kind of people. 14. B. Democracy United States' representative democracy drew upon the traditions of the Iroquois Confederacy. Indians didn't think of themselves as Indians when European settlers arrived, but rather as members of separate tribes or nations, divided by language, custom and religion. The idea of "blood quantum," i.e., the determination of Indian identity by ancestry, was imposed by the federal government. In contrast, tribal membership traditionally was open to anyone, even Europeans, as long as they accepted tribal customs and authority. There were no horses in the New World until they were brought over by Europeans. Measles, small-pox and other communicable diseases were also unknown in the Americas prior to European exploration. Some historians estimate that up to 90% of all Atlantic coast Indians died from diseases contracted from European traders and explorers by the time of the first Plymouth settlement.