
New Books Network Sunmin Kim, "The Unruly Facts of Race: The Politics of Knowledge Production in the Early Twentieth-Century Immigration Debate" (U Chicago Press, 2026)
Mar 19, 2026
Sunmin Kim, associate professor of sociology at Dartmouth and author of The Unruly Facts of Race, explores how early 20th-century experts shaped ideas about race and immigration. He discusses the Dillingham Commission, contested scientific methods like Boas’s skull studies, field agents’ surprising reports, debates over quotas and assimilation, and the exclusion of Japanese migrants. The conversation reframes who counts as "American."
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When Ethnicity Replaced Skull Science
- Oscar Folkmar introduced an ethnic framework to distinguish Southern and Eastern Europeans using language, history, and religion rather than skull metrics.
- He proposed a 1,000-year crystallization rule to mark group identity, pragmatically protecting long-settled groups like the Irish.
Boas Turned Skull Data Against Racism
- Franz Boas used skull measurements to show environmental influence: immigrant children's head shapes converged after years in the U.S.
- Boas turned eugenicists' favored metrics into evidence for nurture, undermining scientific racism via positivist methods.
Hurston Refused Comparison And Wrote Black Life As Is
- Zora Neale Hurston trained with Franz Boas and collected folklore in Black Florida townships instead of comparing Black culture to whiteness.
- She recorded unvarnished everyday life, refusing assimilationist comparison and centering Black life on its own terms.



