The Census That Made Blacks Vanish: Statistical Racism in 19th-Century Argentina.
In the nineteenth century, Argentina underwent a profound transformation in its national identity, one that was deeply intertwined with race, modernity, and the politics of enumeration. The disappearance of Afro-Argentines from official records—most notably from the national censuses—has long puzzled historians and sociologists. This phenomenon, often described as the “statistical disappearance” of Black Argentines, was not merely a demographic accident but a deliberate act of racial erasure embedded in the state’s project of nation-building. The census, a seemingly neutral instrument of governance, became a tool of ideological construction, shaping the contours of Argentine identity around whiteness and European modernity. As historian George Reid Andrews observes, “The census in nineteenth-century Argentina did not simply record reality; it created it” (Andrews, The Afro-Argentines of Buenos Aires, 1800–1900 , 1980). Through the manipulation of categories, selective enu...