The key insight here is that the Monster Ethnica is . It is not an intrinsic property of a people but a projection onto the blank spaces of the map. Where knowledge ends, monstrosity begins. Part II: The Biological Turn—From Myth to Scientific Racism The Enlightenment promised the death of monsters. Reason, empiricism, and Linnaean taxonomy would surely classify the dog-headed men as folklore. Instead, the Monster Ethnica mutated into a more dangerous form: scientific racism . The monsters did not disappear; they were simply given new Latin names.
The Monster Ethnica was a spatial category. To go beyond the known map was to enter a zone of ontological uncertainty. In this zone, the laws of nature—and by extension, the laws of God and morality—did not apply. The Cynocephali barked instead of speaking; the Blemmyae had no head, symbolizing the absence of reason. These were not alternative human cultures; they were failed experiments of creation. When medieval Christians encountered real peoples—the Mongols, the Africans, the Siberian tribes—they often forced them into these Plinian categories. The Tartars became the prophesied hordes of Gog and Magog, cannibalistic and bestial. The Nubians were conflated with the Blemmyae .
The Monster Ethnica also explains the phenomenon of "double genocide"—the killing of the perpetrators after they have been defeated. The Nazis were not just imprisoned; they were "de-Nazified." The Confederate soldier was not just defeated; he was reconstructed. But the Monster Ethnica is not always the tool of the powerful. It can be used by the weak. When a colonized people describes the colonizer as a vampire or a demon, they are deploying the same technology of ontological exclusion in reverse. The danger is symmetrical. We would like to believe that the Monster Ethnica belongs to the age of medieval maps and colonial skull-measuring. It does not. It has merely moved to social media, where it proliferates at unprecedented speed.
Introduction: When Human Becomes Horror In the summer of 1492, Christopher Columbus did not merely expect to find gold and spices; he expected to find monsters. His logbooks reference expectations of encountering the Plinian races—the Cynocephali (dog-headed men), the Blemmyae (headless creatures with faces on their chests), and the Sciopods (one-legged beings who used their giant foot as a sunshade). When he encountered the Arawak people, he did not see humans. He saw potential slaves and souls to be saved, but also a liminal creature—neither fully beast nor fully civilized man. This is the essence of the Monster Ethnica : the transformation of foreign peoples into monstrous beings through the lens of fear, power, and narrative control.