#touches on several ideas ive been percolating on recently in a super interesting relevant way
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"The subtext that undergirds this new anti-racist discourseâthat Black-white relationships are inherently fraught and must be navigated with the help of professionals and technical expertsâtestifies to the impoverishment of our interracial imagination, not to its enrichment. More gravely, anti-color-blind etiquette treats Black Americans as exotic others, permanent strangers whose racial difference is so chasmic that it must be continually managed, whose mode of humanness is so foreign that it requires white people to adopt a special set of manners and 'race conscious' ritualistic practices to even have a simple conversation."*
*(emphasis mine)
By:Â Tyler Austin Harper
Published: Aug 14, 2023
The hotel was soulless, like all conference hotels. I had arrived a few hours before check-in, hoping to drop off my bags before I met a friend for lunch. The employees were clearly frazzled, overwhelmed by the sudden influx of several hundred impatient academics. When I asked where I could put my luggage, the guy at the front desk simply pointed to a nearby hallway. âWait over there with her; heâs coming back.â
Who âheâ was remained unclear, but I saw the woman he was referring to. She was white and about my age. She had a conference badge and a large suitcase that she was rolling back and forth in obvious exasperation. âBeen waiting long?â I asked, taking up a position on the other side of the narrow hallway. âVery,â she replied. For a while, we stood in silence, minding our phones. Eventually, we began chatting.
The conversation was wide-ranging: the papers we were presenting, the bad A/V at the hotel, our favorite things to do in the city. At some point, we began talking about our jobs. She told me thatâlike so many academicsâshe was juggling a temporary teaching gig while also looking for a tenure-track position.
âItâs hard,â she said, âtoo many classes, too many students, too many papers to grade. No time for your own work. Barely any time to apply to real jobs.â
When I nodded sympathetically, she asked about my job and whether it was tenure-track. I admitted, a little sheepishly, that it was.
âIâd love to teach at a small college like that,â she said. âI feel like none of my students wants to learn. Itâs exhausting.â
Then, out of nowhere, she said something that caught me completely off guard: âBut I shouldnât be complaining to you about this. I know how hard BIPOC faculty have it. Youâre the last person I should be whining to.â
I was taken aback, but I shouldnât have been. It was the kind of awkward comment Iâve grown used to over the past few years, as âanti-racismâ has become the reigning ideology of progressive political culture. Until recently, calling attention to a strangerâs race in such a way would have been considered a social faux pas. That she made the remark without thinking twiceâa remark, it should be noted, that assumes being a Black tenure-track professor is worse than being a marginally employed white oneâshows how profoundly interracial social etiquette has changed since 2020âs âsummer of racial reckoning.â Thatâs when anti-racismâfocused on combating âcolor-blindnessâ in both policy and personal conductâgrabbed ahold of the liberal mainstream.
Though this âreckoningâ brought increased public attention to the deep embeddedness of racism in supposedly color-blind American institutions, it also made instant celebrities of a number of race experts and âdiversity, equity, and inclusionâ (DEI) consultants who believe that being anti-racist means undergoing a âjourneyâ of radical personal transformation. In their righteous crusade against the bad color-blindness of policies such as race-neutral college admissions, these contemporary anti-racists have also jettisoned the kind of good color-blindness that holds that we are more than our race, and that we should conduct our social life according to that idealized principle. Rather than balance a critique of color-blind law and policy with a continuing embrace of interpersonal color-blindness as a social etiquette, contemporary anti-racists throw the baby out with the bathwater. In place of the old color-blind ideal, they have foisted upon well-meaning white liberals a successor social etiquette predicated on the necessity of foregrounding racial difference rather than minimizing it.
As a Black guy who grew up in a politically purple areaâwhere being a good person meant adhering to the kind of civil-rights-era color-blindness that is now passĂ©âI find this emergent anti-racist culture jarring. Many of my liberal friends and acquaintances now seem to believe that being a good person means constantly reminding Black people that you are aware of their Blackness. Difference, no longer to be politely ignored, is insisted upon at all times under the guise of acknowledging âpositionality.â Though I am rarely made to feel excessively aware of my race when hanging out with more conservative friends or visiting my hometown, in the more liberal social circles in which I typically travel, my race is constantly invokedââacknowledgedâ and âcenteredââby well-intentioned anti-racist âallies.â
This âacknowledgementâ tends to take one of two forms. The first is the song and dance in which white people not-so-subtly let you know that they know that race and racism exist. This includes finding ways to interject discussion of some (bad) news item about race or racism into casual conversation, apologizing for having problems while white (âYouâre the last person I should be whining toâ), or inversely, offering âsupportâ by attributing any normal human problem you have to racism.
The second way good white liberals often âcenterâ racial difference in everyday interactions with minorities is by trying, always clumsily, to ensure that their âmarginalizedâ friends and familiars are âculturallyâ comfortable. My favorite personal experiences of this include an acquaintance who invariably steers dinner or lunch meetups to Black-owned restaurants, and the time that a friend of a friend invited me over to go swimming in their pool before apologizing for assuming that I know how to swim (âI know thatâs a culturally specific thingâ). It is a peculiar quirk of the 2020sâ racial discourse that this kind of âacknowledgementâ and âcenteringâ is viewed as progress.
My point is not that conservatives have better racial politicsâthey do notâbut rather that something about current progressive racial discourse has become warped and distorted. The anti-racist culture that is ascendant seems to me to have little to do with combatting structural racism or cultivating better relationships between white and Black Americans. And its rejection of color-blindness as a social ethos is not a new frontier of radical political action.
No, at the core of todayâs anti-racism is little more than a vibe shiftâa soft matrix of conciliatory gestures and hip phraseology that give adherents the feeling that there has been a cultural change, when in fact we have merely put carpet over the rotting floorboards. Although this push to center rather than sidestep racial difference in our interpersonal relationships comes from a good place, it tends to rest on a troubling, even racist subtext: that white and Black Americans are so radically different that interracial relationships require careful management, constant eggshell-walking, and even expert guidance from professional anti-racists. Rather than producing racial harmony, this new ethos frequently has the opposite effect, making white-Black interactions stressful, unpleasant, or, perhaps most often, simply weird.
Since the murder of George Floyd in May 2020, progressive anti-racism has centered on two concepts that helped Americans make sense of his senseless death: âstructural racismâ and âimplicit bias.â The first of these is a sociopolitical concept that highlights how certain institutionsâmaternity wards, police barracks, lending companies, housing authorities, etc.âproduce and replicate racial inequalities, such as the disproportionate killing of Black men by the cops. The second is a psychologicalconcept that describes the way that all individualsâfrom bleeding-heart liberals to murderers such as Derek Chauvinâharbor varying degrees of subconscious racial prejudice.
Though âstructural racismâ and âimplicit biasâ target different scales of the social orderâinstitutions on the one hand, individuals on the otherâunderlying both of these ideas is a critique of so-called color-blind ideology, or what the sociologist Eduardo Bonilla-Silva calls âcolor-blind racismâ: the idea that policies, interactions, and rhetoric can be explicitly race-neutral but implicitly racist. As concepts, both âstructural racismâ and âimplicit biasâ rest on the presupposition that racism is an enduring feature of institutional and social life, and that so-called race neutrality is a covertly racist myth that perpetuates inequality. Some anti-racist scholars such as Uma Mazyck Jayakumar and Ibram X. Kendi have put this even more bluntly: ââRace neutralâ is the new âseparate but equal.ââ Yet, although anti-racist academics and activists are right to argue that race-neutral policies canât solve racial inequitiesâthat supposedly color-blind laws and policies are often anything butâover the past few years, this line of criticism has also been bizarrely extended to color-blindness as a personal ethos governing behavior at the individual level.
The most famous proponent of dismantling color-blindness in everyday interactions is Robin DiAngelo, who has made an entire (very condescending) career out of asserting that if white people are not uncomfortable, anti-racism is not happening. âWhite comfort maintains the racial status quo, so discomfort is necessary and important,â the corporate anti-racist guru advises. Over the past three years, this kind of anti-color-blind, pro-discomfort rhetoric has become the norm in anti-racist discourse. On the final day of the 28-day challenge in Layla Saadâs viral Me and White Supremacy, budding anti-racists are tasked with taking âout-of-your-comfort-zone actions,â such as apologizing to people of color in their life and having âuncomfortable conversations.â Frederick Josephâs best-selling book The Black Friend takes a similar tack. The problem with color-blindness, Joseph counsels, is it allows âwhite people to continue to be comfortable.â The NFL analyst Emmanuel Acho wrote an entire book, simply called Uncomfortable Conversations With a Black Man, that admonishes readers to âstop celebrating color-blindness.â And, of course, there are endless how-to guides for having these âuncomfortable conversationsâ with your Black friends.
Once the dominant progressive ideology, professing âI donât see colorâ is now viewed as a kind of dog whistle that papers over implicit bias. Instead, current anti-racist wisdom holds that we must acknowledge racial difference in our interactions with others, rather than assume that race neednât be at the center of every interracial conversation or encounter. Coming to grips with the transition we have undergone over the past decadeâcolor-blind etiquetteâs swing from de rigueur to racistârequires a longer view of an American cultural transition. Civil-rights-era color-blindness was replaced with an individualistic, corporatized anti-racism, one focused on the purification of white psyches through racial discomfort, guilt, and âdoing the workâ as a road to self-improvement.
Writing in 1959, the social critic Philip Rieff argued that postwar America was transforming from a religious and economic cultureâone oriented around common institutions such as the church and the marketâto a psychological culture, one oriented around the self and its emotional fulfillment. By the 1960s, Rieff had given this shift a name: âthe triumph of the therapeutic,â which he defined as an emergent worldview according to which the âself, improved, is the ultimate concern of modern culture.â Yet, even as he diagnosed our culture with self-obsession, Rieff also noticed something peculiar and even paradoxical. Therapeutic culture demanded that we reflect our self-actualization outward. Sharing our innermost selves with the worldâgood, bad, and uglyâbecame a new social mandate under the guise that authenticity and open self-expression are necessary for social cohesion.
Recent anti-racist mantras like âWhite silence is violenceâ reflect this same sentiment: exhibitionist displays of âracistâ guilt are viewed as a necessary precursor to racial healing and community building. In this way, todayâs attacks on interpersonal color-blindnessâand progressivesâ growing fixation on implicit bias, public confession, and race-conscious social etiquetteâare only the most recent manifestations of the cultural shift Rieff described. Indeed, the seeds of the current backlash against color-blindness began decades ago, with the application of a New Age, therapeutic outlook to race relations: so-called racial-sensitivity training, the forefather of todayâs equally spurious DEI programming.
In her 2001 book, Race Experts, the historian Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn painstakingly details how racial-sensitivity training emerged from the 1960sâ human-potential movement and its infamous âencounter groups.â As she explains, what began as a more or less countercultural phenomenon was later corporatized in the form of the anemic, pointless workshops controversially lampooned on The Office. Not surprisingly, this shift reflected the ebb and flow of corporate interests: Whereas early workplace training emphasized compliance with the newly minted Civil Rights Act of 1964, later incarnations would focus on improving employee relations and, later still, leveraging diversity to secure better business outcomes.
If there is something distinctive about the anti-color-blind racial etiquette that has emerged since George Floydâs death, it is that these sites of encounter have shifted from official institutional spaces to more intimate ones where white people and minorities interact as friends, neighbors, colleagues, and acquaintances. Racial-awareness raising is a dynamic no longer quarantined to formalized, compulsory settings like the boardroom or freshman orientation. Instead, every interracial interaction is a potential scene of (one-way) racial edification and supplication, encounters in which good white liberals are expected to be transparent about their âpositionality,â confront their âwhiteness,â andâif the situation calls for itâconfess their âimplicit bias.â
In a vacuum, many of the prescriptions advocated by the anti-color-blind crowd are reasonable: We should all think more about our privileges and our place in the world. An uncomfortable conversation or an honest look in the mirror can be precursors to personal growth. We all carry around harmful, implicit biases and we do need to examine the subconscious assumptions and prejudices that underlie the actions we take and the things we say. My objection is not to these ideas themselves, which are sensible enough. No, my objection is that anti-racism offers little more than a Marie Kondoâism for the white soul, promising to declutter racial baggage and clear a way to white fulfillment without doing anything meaningful to combat structural racism. As Lasch-Quinn correctly foresaw, âCasting interracial problems as issues of etiquette [puts] a premium on superficial symbols of good intentions and good motivations as well as on style and appearance rather than on the substance of change.â
Yet the problem with the therapeutics of contemporary anti-racism is not just that they are politically sterile. When anti-color-blindness and its ideology of insistent ârace consciousnessâ are translated into the sphere of private lifeâto the domain of friendships, block parties, and backyard barbecuesâthey assault the very idea of a multiracial society, producing new forms of racism in the process. The fact that our media environment is inundated with an endless stream of books, articles, and social-media tutorials that promise to teach white people how to simply interact with the Black people in their life is not a sign of anti-racist progress, but of profound regression.
The subtext that undergirds this new anti-racist discourseâthat Black-white relationships are inherently fraught and must be navigated with the help of professionals and technical expertsâtestifies to the impoverishment of our interracial imagination, not to its enrichment. More gravely, anti-color-blind etiquette treats Black Americans as exotic others, permanent strangers whose racial difference is so chasmic that it must be continually managed, whose mode of humanness is so foreign that it requires white people to adopt a special set of manners and ârace consciousâ ritualistic practices to even have a simple conversation.
If we are going to find a way out of the racial discord that has defined American life post-Trump and post-Charlottesville and post-Floyd, we have to begin with a more sophisticated understanding of color-blindness, one that rejects the bad color-blindness on offer from the Republican Party and its partisans, as well as the anti-color-blindness of the anti-racist consultants. Instead, we should embrace the good color-blindness of not too long ago. At the heart of that color-blindness was a radical claim, one imperfectly realized but perfect as an ideal: that despite the weight of a racist past that isnât even past, we can imagine a world, or at least an interaction between two people, where racial difference doesnât make a difference.
[ Via: https://archive.today/8zfvc ]
#found this while looking for something else entirely#touches on several ideas ive been percolating on recently in a super interesting relevant way#dovetails with some conversations ive been having with white friends and in therapy as well#really glad i found it#ive been thinking about the theory of like a propensity for overcorrection as part of the work of unlearning and deconstructing#speaking both toward unlearning and deconstructing white supremacy culture but also maladaptive coping mechanisms wrt spiritual healing#and its because the more i learn and read and think about it the more i am starting to think of the two concepts as basically linked#not to get fake deep or anything but i do think it is all connected#whiteness and supremacy culture and capitalism .. all of it alienates us systematically from our communities and like. spiritual wellbeing#its the syllabus for individualism perfectionism right to comfort urgency defensiveness black and white reasoning etc#and is that not literally all the same shit we're all paying thousands of dollars to exhume in years of therapy?#idk man it seems to me like every time i turn over a rock in my healing journey wsc is down there underneath everything else#just like blackrock and vanguard you trace your micro-issue far enough back to the source and behind all the shell corps there it is#it feels almost fantastically reductive like imagine reality being like a brandon sanderson novel with exactly one Big Bad#to fight at the end of every book and maybe finally vanquish by the end of the series#like im trying to be critical of the impulse to over simplify an objectively complicated and nuanced issue#the last thing i want is to cast something as convoluted and deeply violent and traumatising as this in a reductive light#and am trying to navigate this idea without framing white people as the 'real' or 'unsung' victims of wsc#because that certainly is not the case or the argument#this just is a theme that keeps cropping up in my conversations and thoughts about both concepts#something to chew on journal about etc#i have so many more thoughts about this branching off in so many directions but this is not the place for that all though . lol#overcorrection#note to self#angie.txt
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