Week 1.
The topic of race and racism is a difficult one to tackle. There is so much history and deeply ingrained processes that define racism that we could spend the rest of our lives investigating it. The Racial Formation article got me thinking about some of the ways that I think about racism, and how others might look at it.
I did not fully agree with the white privilege article, however. I understand that the author was trying to bring attention to it in terms of things that we as a majority would not think of, but some of the things that she mentioned aren't really a privilege that I would have for being white compared to just being something that is a fact because a non-white person would be a minority (numerically speaking). For example, number 2 on her list: "If I should need to move, I can be pretty sure of renting or purchasing housing in an area
which I can afford and in which I would want to live." This really has nothing to do directly to being of any color, and is all about how successful the individual is. Granted, indirectly you could argue that a non-white is at a disadvantage in terms of job acquisition and fair pay, but there are just as many white people who can't afford to buy or rent in an area they would want to live.
I feel as though the "invisible backpack of white privilege" is really a backwards way of approaching the topic. McIntosh argues that these all need to be brought to light in order to "give up" the privileges to others, instead of looking at what other people of color may be missing in order to try to close the rift. Some of the other things that McIntosh mentions in the article don't seem to really help anything even if rectified. For example, she lists many things that involve the lack of strong cultural ties in areas where another race may be a minority, " 1 can go into a music shop and count on finding the music of my race represented, into a supermarket and find the staple foods which fit with my cultural traditions, into a hairdresser's shop and find someone who can cut my hair." I suppose that these could be considered a "privilege," that whites would have, but it isn't a useful point to make an argument on. There's literally nothing that can be done to infuse these things into another part of the world without having a significant population there. This isn't a privilege that I can give up, or spread to others if I lack a full understanding of their culture. In addition, it doesn't solve anything important, such as ending hostilities or distrust for other cultures, which should really have been the focus of the article.