
New Books in History 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 who studies race and immigration, discusses the Dillingham Commission and early 20th-century knowledge production. He explores shifts from biological race theories to cultural and ethnic categories. He examines field research that complicated assumptions, debates over quotas and exclusion, and figures like Franz Boas and Yamato Ichihashi.
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State Origin Of Ethnicity As A Classification Tool
- Robert Folkmann (Falkmar) introduced an early state-driven concept of ethnicity to distinguish Southern/Eastern Europeans from earlier migrants.
- He used language, history and a 1,000-year crystallization heuristic to justify who counted as culturally assimilable.
Boas Turned Racist Science Against Itself
- Franz Boas used the commission's own positivist tools to undermine scientific racism by showing skull measurements converged across immigrant children over time.
- His findings emphasized environmental 'nurture' effects and inspired a Boasian anthropology skeptical of essentialist race claims.
Hurston's Ethnography That Refused Comparison
- Zora Neale Hurston trained with Boas and collected Black folklore without framing it as a comparison to whiteness.
- She documented unvarnished everyday life in Black Florida townships rather than arguing assimilation or parity.

