mousme: A view of a woman's legs from behind, wearing knee-high rainbow socks. The rest of the picture is black and white. (Rainbow Guard)
mousme ([personal profile] mousme) wrote2009-03-11 11:41 am
Entry tags:

On explaining privilege

I keep coming back to RaceFail09. I really wish I wasn't, but it's troubling me, for obvious reasons, and not-so-obvious reasons.

I am not going to try to unpack the invisible knapsack here. I'm just thinking out loud.

Okay, so I am what the Intarwebs would consider a PWC (Privileged White Chick). So far, so good. I am also a lesbian. That makes me both a woman and homosexual. Still with me? Good.

This means that I get the dubious privilege of explaining privilege to those around me who are either not women, or not homosexual, or neither of the above. I get questions on the topic of GLBT issues all the time, especially when I start a new job/meet someone new/enter a new situation. Essentially, I spend a lot of time coming out to people, and then explaining What It All Means. Whether I like it or not, people assume that I am somehow the Official Representative of the Local GLBT Community (which is totally not the case, and I usually try to explain this right off the bat, as part of my little GLBT 101 spiel).

Clicking on a lot of links in the Epic Debate Fail Of Doom, I am coming across a plethora of posts by self-described PoCs (People of Colour), who are righteously annoyed at having to explain themselves to the PWPs (Privileged White People) who ask them for information/clarification/cluebats/etc. Some have downright been foaming at the mouth.

Okay. So I get that this is annoying/frustrating/makes you want to tear your hair out by the roots/possibly commit vehicular manslaughter after particularly stupid-seeming questions. I get it, I do. If one more person asks me if I would choose to be straight if I were given the opportunity, I may not be held responsible for my actions.

That being said, I feel that it is important for me to do this anyway, regardless of what my feelings are on the subject. Yes, it's annoying when someone proclaims that their good friend/cousin/mailmain/busboy is gay and that's totally fine with them, and it's annoying that they seem to want a pat and a cookie for it. But you know what?

They're not going to educate themselves.

It's as simple as that, really. If we, the People Lacking $Privilege, don't say: "You are mistaken in your assumption, and here's why," they are never, ever going to get it. No way, no how. I'm not suggesting that we need to deliver a three-hour multimedia presentation on the ins and outs of privilege, and spoon-feed it to them. But give them something, for crying out loud!

PWPs, myself included, are far from immune from asking really stupid questions to which we honestly don't have the answer. From my perspective, when I ask a stupid question, it's okay to look at me as though I just grew antlers (although my feelings will be hurt, I have yet to die from that particular affliction), but then I would very much like to be told why my question was stupid. It was asked in good faith, and a good faith answer would be appreciated. Even if it's an answer along the lines of: "That question isn't relevant/is stupid, and I don't have the time/energy/capacity to explain it to you in full, but some research in $Place is a good place to start."

Yes, it's tiresome. No, we shouldn't have to do it. No, each individual should not have to suddenly be the representative of $Group to which they belong. It sucks. Absolutely. Nonetheless, it's the reality of the situation, and at the very least the PWPs ought to be encouraged to move past those first tentative steps they're taking, to take the initiative and go out and educate themselves. First steps aren't enough, but if they get whacked on the head with the You-Are-Privileged-And-Therefore-Wrong-Forever Stick, then they're going to pull back into their shell and never come out again, and now it's a lost cause. First steps don't deserve a cookie, but they don't deserve a beatdown, either.

Oh, and while I can fully understand that that last paragraph is essentially an argument about tone, please rest assured that I am not trying to say "If only people had been more civil/polite/less hateful/whatever attribute you please, then this terrible misunderstanding would never have happened," because of course that's patently not true. Maybe the debate would have taken on a different form, and that form would likely have been equally filled with fail on both sides. I'm just lamenting the fact that many people (the aforementioned PWPs) are going to come away from this angry, more confused than ever, and less willing to learn.

I keep swearing I'm done with this, but then I come back and poke at it some more, so I'm no longer going to promise anything. :P

:::ETA:::

I have apparently been linked into [livejournal.com profile] rydra_wong's Linkspam of Doom thing.

So, dear New People Following The Fail To My LJ, I feel compelled to lay down a ground rule, should you want to comment.

Don't be an asshat.

This means no flaming, no personal attacks, no mudslinging, no outing people. Post in good faith, and with an open mind. Wait ten minutes before typing your responses, if you must. If you're still mad, then wait ten more minutes.

My friends (LJ and RL) are a varied bunch, with a wide range of experiences and opinions. The one thing they have in common in this LJ is respect of my space. I would ask that you also show this respect in your posts. (So far so good, btw.)

If you don't follow this one rule, I will ban you summarily, no questions asked.

[identity profile] mousme.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 02:12 am (UTC)(link)
Hi!

No idea how you got to my little corner of the internet, but welcome. :)

I had a bit of a revelation, thanks to [livejournal.com profile] the_xtina, about where my disconnect came from concerning the aforementioned rage and frustration.

1- I tend to assume people are in good faith, because that's my default mode.

2- My own experience as the Minority Representativeā„¢ (for whatever it's worth) has been, essentially, on a volunteer basis. I totally, absolutely pass for a straight white girl. I choose not to, but that's where the difference lies: it's a choice for me. If my skin colour were not what it is, I would have no choice in whether or not people perceive me a certain way.

So I can choose, should I so desire, to go back and hide in my closet, and NOT engage with the regular populace and field their questions.

Anyway, yeah. That was my moment of illumination today. I didn't get it, still sort of don't, but am groping my way to understanding.

[identity profile] acrimonyastraea.livejournal.com 2009-03-12 02:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Hi, I'm here from Rydra_Wong's link. I was going to say exactly what was said above about people not actually asking in good faith.

I'm also a queer feminist woman, and I've been involved in a couple feminist blogs where I interacted with lots and lots and lots of people being privileged assholes. I think it's really very different on the internet and in person. It's easier to tell when someone is just being a jerk in person, IME.

After a while though, certain kinds of patterns happen over and over and it gets easier to recognize derailing vs someone genuinely trying. As I've read through the racefail links and a lot of comments, it seems to me that a lot of people complaining about how angry people are and how people aren't just willing to try to explain are ignoring the fact that there was a hell of a lot of explaining done before people got really angry and impatient.

There is a lot of patient explaining going on all over. But when one has explained the same point over and over and still gets challenged by clueless privileged people (often on the very same THREAD, let alone in the same overall discussion), then it's pretty hard to give them the benefit of the doubt. People aren't just asking to be educated, they aren't listening and they are valuing their own privileged point of view over the input of others.