Sunday, January 13, 2008

Racism is ...

Prejudice plus power.

That's a simplified version of the definition I learned in a dismantling racism training. (The one I attended was part of the Mennonite church's Damascus Road dismantling racism program; see http://mcc.org/damascusroad/.*) I find it helpful to start with this simplified version and build up and out.

* Many of the understandings I'll share in this post derive from the Damascus Road approach, though I depart into some different understandings and presentations along the way.

Let's start with prejudice. Different forms of pre-judging individual people and groups based on negative stereotypes of groups create different prejudices; anyone can hold a prejudice. There are prejudices based on virtually all aspects of social location, including gender, race, class, age, nationality, ethnicity, ability, religion ... the list goes on.

Individual prejudices have a lot of downsides: they keep us from really seeing the person in front of us. Prejudices are untruths that operate as truths, and so perceptions, thoughts, attitudes and behaviors based on prejudices are inherently flawed and out of touch with reality. Running into a person who is prejudiced against you can ruin your day.

But, running into a person who is prejudiced and holds power over you can ruin your life.

That's why the second part of the definition is important: Racism = prejudice plus power. In this case, we are focusing on a particular form of prejudice -- racial prejudice -- and asserting that the oppression known as racism is formed when racial prejudice is combined with power.

Defining racism this way doesn't mean individual prejudices don't matter; they do. We should all work to eliminate prejudicial thinking and behavior. But racism is here defined as more than racial prejudice: it is racial prejudice plus the power to enforce one's prejudices in a way that affects not just the person standing in front of you, but possibly many others.

So, we can build on our definition. Racism = racial prejudice plus the systemic misuse of power.

It's a simple logic: who will have a more detrimental effect, the racially prejudiced person who cuts you off in traffic or the racially prejudiced bank officer who decides no people of color will get house loans in a particular part of town? The first act is an instance of racial prejudice, individual in nature: the second act is an instance of racial prejudice, empowered by institutional position to have a systemic effect. Individual racism can get you annoyed; institutional racism can get you dead, or at the very least subject to a dramatically reduced quality of life.

Both kinds of racial prejudice matter; but the larger threat -- and the one we white people tend to ignore -- is the effect of institutional racism. Why are white people so oblivious to institutional racism? Because we benefit from racialized disparities in access to power, and its easier to maintain that disparity if we don't acknowledge it.

After all, who holds most of the systemic power in our society? White people. For a quick reality check in this regard, take a look at the roster of CEOs on the Forbes 500; the Senate; the House of Representatives; the board of directors for your local hospitals, schools, etc.

Let's pause here to note an important point. If most of the institutional power is held by white people, then people of color do not tend to have systemic power, and therefore cannot be racist.

I know this flies in the face of what a lot of people want to say; but it's a useful distinction, one which helps us keep power in the equation. Yes, people of color can hold racial prejudices, against white people or against other ethnicities; but people of color do not typically have the institutional power to enforce and benefit from their prejudices. There simply are no large-scale societal systems (think on the scale of our country's financial system, the educational system, the health-care system) run by people of color.

A second point also matters. The more power to be had (and money to be made) in a position, the more likely that position is to be filled by a white person, who is probably also male and straight. The fact that power tends to correlate with race, gender and sexual orientation points out the interrelations among not only forms of power but also forms of oppression.

Here I want to quote Audre Lorde's description of various forms of oppression, their interconnections highlighted by her elegant prose:

"Racism: The belief in the inherent superiority of one race over all others and thereby the right to dominance.

Sexism: The belief in the inherent superiority of one sex and thereby the right to dominance.

Heterosexism: The belief in the inherent superiority of one pattern of loving and thereby its right to dominance.

Homophobia: the fear of feelings of love for members of one's own sex and therefore the hatred of those feelings in others." (Sister Outsider, 45)

Each of these isms and their related phobias and prejudices can be and are magnified by connection with systemic power.

Each of us is called by the commandment to love to overcome these isms, phobias and prejudices in our selves. But I would argue that the commandment to love the neighbor as self means we are also called to address the systemic misuse of power that enables these isms to have such wide-ranging, life-destroying effects.

Love engages the system. Love doesn't quit because the system is too big. Jesus, the one who is Christ for us, said there is no greater love than the love that lays down its life for its friends.

We can certainly begin by laying down our prejudices, over and over. We can go on by thinking about power, what it is and who it is for, and whether it helps us choose life, or whether it is being used on our behalf to deal death.

4 comments:

Mary said...

I took a grad.course a couple of years ago, in contract law, that comes to mind. The prof. told us that prejudice is not against the law, but discrimination is. Her distinction pointed out the difference between prejudice (an attitude) and discrimination (an act). I hate rap music (admittedly prejudice is at work when i hear it) but this attitude does not give me the right to "force" others not to listen to it. Believe me, I've had powerful fantasies about shooting the radios out of many automobiles that spew obscenity for all of us to "enjoy".
Perhaps you omit an ingredient in the definition of racism, i.e. the element of intention. Racial prejudice plus power PLUS INTENT equals racism. What do you think?

Tammerie said...

Good point ... it brings up another, which is the focus on results, outcomes, effects. These matter more than intent, because they result from actions (to your professor's point). Unfortunately, we can have racist outcomes without having racist intents. So, I think considering intent is important, but I don't think I'd put it in the definition as a requirement.

I think the key for those of us who don't want racist outcomes is to consider intent in terms of what actions we choose, based on what outcomes we want: to make our actions line up with our intents.

Unknown said...

I admittedly want to puff my white feathers in defense. In my simplistic world view racial/ethnic (along with many other factors) stereotypes/generalizations serve one well and offer a starting point from which to proceed in any relationship. These are learned mostly from experience and have served me well thus far. Coincidentally, before visiting your blog this morning, I read and interesting piece on racism at http://www.jpfo.org/articles-assd/rose-race-firearms.htm. Thoughts?

Tammerie said...

I like your use of the concept of a worldview, Kevin; I find that term useful, too. One of the ways our worldviews differ is that I would not think of stereotypes in the same way as what is learned by experience. I think of a stereotype as an idea about a people group that may be based on our own experience, but is just as often picked up from others’ comments or from the wider culture. Experience, on the other hand, is just that: your experiences with particular individuals.

I differ, too, in thinking that stereotypes are not the best starting points for relationship. I don’t want to be judged by your experiences with people I don’t know, who may not really be anything like me. It is a human tendency to categorize and lump things together; otherwise we’d be overwhelmed with the sheer variety of stimuli we face every day. But people are worth the trouble to experience individually, especially in situations where we as white people tend to be handed societal privilege, or where we have institutional power.

I read the article you sent the link to; I won’t take the space here to refute everything I’d like to – especially his assumption that being armed is an answer to everything – but I will say that I disagree with his contention that racial slurs aren’t really problematic. In fact, they are; an environment where racial slurs are acceptable is more likely to also render physical violence more acceptable.

 
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