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词汇 racialism
释义

Definition of racialism in English:

racialism

noun ˈreɪʃəlɪz(ə)mˈreɪʃəˌlɪzəm
  • another term for racism
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Those identifying an ethnic basis for sectional strife had greater affinity with a second intellectual trend of the mid-nineteenth century: the romantic racialism ascendant on both sides of the Atlantic.
    • For the sort of oppression they favour is the seed from which all racialism, including anti-Semitism, grows.
    • Thus, ‘Darwinist ideology,’ as she calls it, was appropriated by sections of the monarchy and capitalist class to fuel a growing racialism.
    • Her academic side includes research on hip-hop music and racialism.
    • Thankfully the obvious evils of Nazism forced many socialists to rethink their racialism, unfortunately leaving their loving faith in State supremacy and social engineering firmly intact.
    • Because of that movement, a number of new laws and regulations were enacted to reduce racialism.
    • In all the social sciences, the doctrines of racialism were accepted as a given.
    • More particularly, the factors that give rise to this condition are said to be the interlocking of massive unemployment, government legislation and growing racialism in local areas.
    • That was a decade before the October Revolution, but racialism was already widely accepted as the mark of the Left in many countries, including England.
    • Once you realize that racialism is at the root of so many problems you can begin to overcome it and then overlook the differences between yourself and others around you.
    • Like others of her generation, she accepted, at least superficially, the ideology of racialism.
    • In Trinidad, I grew up in the last days of that kind of racialism.
    • While eschewing explicit racialism, advocates of immigration restriction expressed anxiety that the immigrants posed a threat to the homogeneity of the United States.
    • Nevertheless, varied combinations of ancient philosophical essentialism and nineteenth-century scientific racialism linger to this day in American folk concepts of race.
    • Although his classmates neither humiliated him nor embraced Nazi racialism, he writes, they ‘looked the other way’ when persecution began.
    • This changed towards the end of the century, when a turn to evolutionist Darwinian theory and German nationalism drove German anthropology towards racialism.
    • She cites last year's hue and cry over the lack of minorities on network television shows as an example of racialism.
    • And when race and diversity stand together as legitimate - even constitutional - principles, we have indeed arrived at the threshold of legally sanctioned racialism.

Derivatives

  • racialist

  • noun & adjective ˈreɪʃ(ə)lɪstˈreɪʃələst
    • Those who heatedly disputed this at the time were dismissed as scaremongering racialists.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Why are our courts backing the bogus racialist theories of such an evil individual?
      • This sort of junk archaeology is only slightly less ludicrous than alien intervention theories but crosses a more problematic line in its openly racialist intent.
      • Again, he pours scorn on racialist mythology but, in his steadfastly conservative way, refuses to become histrionically sanctimonious on the matter, preferring studied contempt to self-promoting outrage.
      • This kind of racialist principle was found to be philosophically invalid and extremely socially damaging 60 years ago.
  • racialize

  • verb ˈreɪʃəlʌɪzˈreɪʃəˌlaɪz
    [with object]
    • 1Make racial in tone or character.

      the ways in which language is used to colonize, racialize, and commodify the Other
      1. 1.1 Categorize or divide according to race.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • this kind of racialized discourse was common to nineteenth-century thinkers
      • Sadly, things like poverty are highly gendered and racialized.
      • Now, I hope it's clear I'm not accusing anyone of racism; this is simply the nature of living and breathing in a deeply racialized country.
      • They simply cannot understand politics without racializing it.
      • a highly racialized society

Definition of racialism in US English:

racialism

nounˈreɪʃəˌlɪzəmˈrāSHəˌlizəm
  • another term for racism
    Example sentencesExamples
    • For the sort of oppression they favour is the seed from which all racialism, including anti-Semitism, grows.
    • Thus, ‘Darwinist ideology,’ as she calls it, was appropriated by sections of the monarchy and capitalist class to fuel a growing racialism.
    • Thankfully the obvious evils of Nazism forced many socialists to rethink their racialism, unfortunately leaving their loving faith in State supremacy and social engineering firmly intact.
    • Once you realize that racialism is at the root of so many problems you can begin to overcome it and then overlook the differences between yourself and others around you.
    • Although his classmates neither humiliated him nor embraced Nazi racialism, he writes, they ‘looked the other way’ when persecution began.
    • While eschewing explicit racialism, advocates of immigration restriction expressed anxiety that the immigrants posed a threat to the homogeneity of the United States.
    • Those identifying an ethnic basis for sectional strife had greater affinity with a second intellectual trend of the mid-nineteenth century: the romantic racialism ascendant on both sides of the Atlantic.
    • In all the social sciences, the doctrines of racialism were accepted as a given.
    • Like others of her generation, she accepted, at least superficially, the ideology of racialism.
    • This changed towards the end of the century, when a turn to evolutionist Darwinian theory and German nationalism drove German anthropology towards racialism.
    • That was a decade before the October Revolution, but racialism was already widely accepted as the mark of the Left in many countries, including England.
    • In Trinidad, I grew up in the last days of that kind of racialism.
    • And when race and diversity stand together as legitimate - even constitutional - principles, we have indeed arrived at the threshold of legally sanctioned racialism.
    • More particularly, the factors that give rise to this condition are said to be the interlocking of massive unemployment, government legislation and growing racialism in local areas.
    • She cites last year's hue and cry over the lack of minorities on network television shows as an example of racialism.
    • Nevertheless, varied combinations of ancient philosophical essentialism and nineteenth-century scientific racialism linger to this day in American folk concepts of race.
    • Her academic side includes research on hip-hop music and racialism.
    • Because of that movement, a number of new laws and regulations were enacted to reduce racialism.
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