Privilege, Power & Difference Allan G. Johnson - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 24
About This Presentation
Title:

Privilege, Power & Difference Allan G. Johnson

Description:

Privilege, Power & Difference Allan G. Johnson Chapters 1 - 3 Rodney King s Question Can t we all just get along? No. Use of words like racism, white, and white ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:2065
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 25
Provided by: smccdEdua2
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Privilege, Power & Difference Allan G. Johnson


1
Privilege, Power Difference Allan G. Johnson
  • Chapters 1 - 3

2
Rodney Kings Question
  • Cant we all just get along? No.
  • Use of words like racism, white, and white racism
    cause people to feel put off, offended
  • Our goal is to soften and shift the emotional
    weight of concepts like privilege, white
    racism
  • Why arent we all getting along? Human nature
    doesnt cut it. (p2,3

3
Were in Trouble
  • Imagine a school or a workplace where all kinds
    of people feel comfortable showing up. valued,
    accepted, supported, appreciated, respected
    belonging. Something very powerful keeps this
    from us.
  • The truth of this powerful forces is everywhere,
    but we dont know how to talk about it and so we
    act as though it doesnt exist

4
The proverbial elephant
  • Everyone pretends not to notice it
  • but the elephant is a society and its people
    for whom a decent and productive social life that
    is true to the best of our essential humanity
    continues to be elusive

5
What is the trouble were in?
  • The trouble were in privileges some groups at
    the expense of others.
  • It creates a yawning divide in levels of income,
    wealth, dignity, safety, health and quality of
    life.
  • It promotes fear, suspicion, discrimination,
    harassment, and violence. p9

6
Wethats in trouble is all of us
  • Not just straight white middle and upper-class
    males
  • It is not just a problem of being black, Chinese,
    Sioux or Mexican because there is no way to
    separate the problem of being, say, black from
    the problem of not being white.
  • We cant separate this from being white

7
Privilege
  • Is always at someone elses expense and always
    exacts a cost.
  • Everything thats done to receive or maintain it,
    however passive and unconscious results in
    suffering and deprivation for someone.
  • Our society attaches privilege to being white and
    male and heterosexual regards of your social
    class.

8
What is the most powerful barrier to change?
  • The trouble were in cant be solved unless the
    privileged make the problem of privilege their
    problem and do something about it.
  • The fact that its so easy for me and other
    people in dominant groups not to do this is the
    single most powerful barrier to change.
  • Understanding how to bring dominant groups into
    the conversation is the challenge.

9
We cant talk about it if we cant use the words
  • Privilege, racism, sexism, anti-Semitism,
    heterosexism, classism, dominance, subordination,
    oppression and patriarchy all the isms
  • Naming something draws attention to it makes
    you more likely to notice it a something
    significant. P11/12

10
The bottom line
  • A trouble we cant talk about is one we cant do
    anything about.
  • We have to reclaim these lost and discredited
    words so that we can use them to name and make
    sense of the truth of whats going on.
  • Reclaiming these words begins with seeing that
    they rarely mean what most people think they mean.

11
Reclaiming the words
  • Racist isnt another word for bad white people
  • Patriarchy isnt another nasty code of men
  • Oppression and dominance name social realities
    that we can participate in without being
    oppressive or dominating people.
  • Feminism isnt an ideology organized around being
    lesbian or hating men.

12
The Trouble Were InPrivilege, Power Difference
  • Difference is not the problem
  • The real illusion connected to difference is the
    popular assumption that people are naturally
    afraid of what they dont know or understand.
  • It is inevitable that youll fear and distrust
    people who arent like you ..in spite of good
    intentions you cant get along with them.

13
A cultural myth
  • That everyone is naturally frightened by
    difference (despite its popularity)
  • This justifies keeping outsiders on the outside
  • There is ample evidence that the unknown has
    always been an attraction i.e. scientists,
    philosophers, explorers, children, etc.
  • Our real fear is what we think we do know, or
    ideas about what we dont know. p17

14
The Diversity Wheel
  • The trouble around diversity, then, isnt just
    that people differ from one another. The trouble
    is produced by a world organized in ways that
    encourage people to use difference to include or
    exclude, reward or punish, credit or discredit,
    elevate or oppress, value or devalue, leave alone
    or harass.

15
The Social Construction of Difference
  • Most of what we experience as real is a
    cultural creation.
  • It is made up, even though we dont experience it
    that way.
  • Consider the black woman in Africa who has not
    experienced white racism and does not identify
    herself as a black woman. African, a woman,
    but not black.

16
Socially Constructed Reality
  • She only became black when she came to the U.S.
    where privilege is organized according to race,
    where she is assigned to a social category that
    bears that name and she is treated differently as
    a result.
  • Baldwin Race and all its categories have no
    significance outside of systems of privilege and
    oppression, social construction of reality

17
What is Privilege?
  • Privilege exists when one group has something of
    value that is denied to others simply because of
    the groups they belong to, rather than because of
    anything theyve done or failed to do. P23
  • Privilege has become one of those loaded words we
    need to reclaim so that we can use it to name and
    illuminate the truth.

18
The luxury of obliviousness
  • Awareness requires effort and commitment.
  • Being able to command the attention of
    lower-status individuals without having to give
    it in return is a key aspect of privilege.
  • Race privilege gives whites little reason to pay
    a lot of attention to African Americans or to how
    white privilege affects them. To be white in
    American means not having to think about it

19
Two Types of Privilege
  • 1. Unearned entitlements things that all
    people should have like feeling safe in public,
    being accepted, valued for what they can
    contribute.
  • When unearned entitlement is restricted to
    certain groups, however, it becomes a form of
    privilege McIntosh calls unearned advantage.
  • p25

20
Two Types of Privilege
  • 2. Conferred dominance goes a step further by
    giving one group power over another. i.e. men
    controlling conversations with women is grounded
    in the cultural assumption that men are supposed
    to dominate women.
  • Reluctance to come to terms with more serious and
    entrenched forms of privilege is why most
    diversity programs produce limited results. p27

21
What Privilege Looks Like in Everyday Life
  • Pg. 27
  • Privilege grants the cultural authority to make
    judgments about others and to have those
    judgments stick. It allows people to define
    reality and have prevailing definitions of
    reality fit their experience.
  • Privilege means being able to decide who gets
    taken seriously, receives attention, etc.

22
Privilege as Paradox
  • Individuals arent what is actually privileged
  • Privilege is defined in relation to a group or
    social category. In other words, race privilege
    is more about white people than it is about white
    people.
  • Whiteness is privileged in this society and one
    has access to that privilege only when identified
    as belonging to that category.

23
The Paradox of Privilege
  • Being privileged without feeling privileged
  • Privilege is more about social categories than
    who people are.
  • Privilege doesnt necessarily make you happy p 38

24
Oppression The Flip Side of Privilege
  • Social forces tend to press upon people and
    hold them down, hem them in and block their
    pursuit of a good life.
  • Belonging to a privileged category that has an
    oppressive relationship with another isnt the
    same as being an oppressive person who behaves in
    oppressive ways. P 41
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com