The Races of Man is Joseph Deniker’s systematic outline of physical anthropology and ethnography as the discipline stood around 1900. Deniker surveys human physical characteristics, classifications of peoples, languages, social institutions, and the geographic distribution of the world’s populations, attempting a comprehensive scientific synthesis.
This edition is offered as a historical document. Deniker’s racial classifications and assumptions reflect the now-rejected frameworks of his era and must be read critically. Nevertheless, the book was influential in its time and remains valuable for understanding the history of anthropology and the methods early scholars used to describe human diversity. It illustrates both the ambitions and the serious flaws of turn-of-the-century ethnographic science.