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Whiteness studies, a fine piece by Mark Richardson

Find below a well argued piece about the contemporary face of racism.It is a racism that has been  developed and propagated by the far left in the halls of academia . This piece is republished here with the kind permission of it’s author, Mark Richardson who’s blog “Oz Conservative” is always worth a look for a calm and insightful look at the nature of human relationships and the place of the individual within society.

Whiteness studies

I wrote this article for the Autumn 2007 edition of The Independent Australian. It draws on a number of pieces written earlier for Oz Conservative.

Ten years ago there were no such courses. Now “whiteness studies” is being taught at over 30 American campuses. In Australia too there are academics teaching this subject; in 2003 they formed their own whiteness studies association.

So what is it? In short, it’s a field of studies based on the theory that whites invented the idea of biological race in order to oppress indigenous peoples and to benefit from unearned privileges.

An Australian whiteness theorist, Damien Riggs, has summarized the new field of studies as follows:

Whiteness is seen as a thoroughly racialised project that aims to legitimate the authority of certain groups over others by drawing on a legacy of ‘biological’ explanations of race … Whilst this approach starts from an understanding of race as a social construction, it also acknowledges the very concrete ways in which race shapes experiences of oppression and privilege.

What is the effect of these studies on white students? One young Australian woman, Veronica Coen, tells us that her whiteness studies course led her,

to recognise that my privilege as an educated middle-class white woman was directly attributed to my ancestor’s theft of indigenous land and their exploitation

She then,

took a frightening journey into Australia’s violent history … The path was at times very distressing. My study journal was often wrinkled with tears.

Nado Aveling, who teaches whiteness studies to student teachers at Perth’s Murdoch University (it’s a mandatory part of the course) tells us of the students’ reactions that:

responses are often strongly emotional, and resistance, misunderstanding, frustration, anger and feelings of inefficacy may be the outcomes.

A social construct?

So whiteness studies confronts students with the claim that their identity is a false social construct, built around the oppression of Aborigines, and that the lives they lead are built unjustly on unearned privilege.

It’s a significant claim to make, but not one which is intellectually coherent. Even its starting point makes little sense.

Damien Riggs tells us that his approach “starts from an understanding of race as a social construction” and that we should reject “the legacy of ‘biological’ explanations of race”.

So we are meant to accept the idea that a “white race” exists not as a biological fact, but as a social construct – as something simply made up by society for its own purposes.

Why would someone make this claim, when it contradicts the visible evidence of a biologically existing white race? The answer has to do with certain intellectual assumptions existing within liberal modernism.

Liberal modernism asserts that to be fully human we must be autonomous in the sense that we are able to determine for ourselves who we are to be. Therefore, liberal modernists don’t like to recognise the existence of a “biological destiny” in which we are influenced in our identity by our sex or our race (or by other inherited or traditional qualities which we don’t choose for ourselves).

Liberal modernists therefore often prefer to believe that qualities like race are oppressive social constructs whose real existence can either be denied or made not to matter.

Inconsistency

Riggs is therefore following a modernist ideology in claiming that race is a social construct. However, even in ideological terms, this claim is incoherent.

Why? One reason is that whiteness theorists don’t simply want to declare race null and void. They want to pin down whites as guilty oppressors. Therefore, they are concerned to emphasise the idea of “whiteness” as a racial category at the same time as they deny the real existence of a white race.

To make this clear, whiteness theorists are strongly opposed to the idea of whites being race blind. They want to make whites more conscious of their “racialised” existence, whilst still claiming that there is no such thing as a really existing white race.

It’s a difficult distinction to hold and Damien Riggs himself warns that,

It is important to recognise that in talking about race we run the risk of reifying race as a ‘real entity’

Similarly, whiteness theorists dismiss the idea of really existing races and yet they recognise Aborigines as a real entity, even to the extent of claiming that Aborigines are sovereign over other groups (Riggs states that “indigenous sovereignty is the ground on which we stand”).

Then there is the issue of “complicity”. Whiteness theorists don’t want to allow any escape routes by which whites can escape the guilt of their unearned privileges. Robinder Kaur, a whiteness theorist at York University has explained that for whites,
“there is no ’safe space’, no haven of guiltlessness to retreat to.”

Therefore, whiteness theorists emphasise the idea of “complicity”: that all whites, even the whiteness theorists themselves, are complicit in white guilt. It is made clear that you are still complicit, even if you renounce all privilege, or choose to identify with Aborigines, or dedicate your life to anti-racist causes. You remain a guilty white.

This may serve a useful purpose within whiteness theory. However, it adds to the intellectual incoherence of whiteness studies. After all, the original purpose of liberal moderns declaring race to be a social construct was to allow individuals to autonomously choose their own multiple, fluid identities. Now, though, we have whiteness theorists, as liberal moderns, talking about whiteness as the most absolute, fixed and inescapable of racialised categories.

Whiteness theorists simply haven’t thought through such implications; they haven’t made a good enough effort to formulate a consistent ideology.

Privilege

Whiteness studies claims that all whites enjoy unearned privilege at the expense of indigenous peoples. How, though, is this claim justified?

Veronica Coen, the student I quoted above, thinks that white Australians benefited from Aboriginal labour in colonial times. This seems an unlikely explanation for the prosperity of modern Australia. Though Aboriginal labour was important in some areas of Australia, its economic importance overall must have been small compared even to white convict labour let alone to that of free settlers.

Even the claim that whites are privileged from having taken Aboriginal land has its problems. The prominent Aboriginal leader Noel Pearson has pointed out that Aborigines who were never dispossessed of their land experience similar problems to those who were:

the problems are pretty similar between communities that have never been dispossessed of their land – like in the western Cape York peninsula – and those that had been positively uprooted. It wasn’t about poverty, and it wasn’t about land, and it wasn’t about the degree of trauma experienced in history.

Pearson blames the dysfunction in Aboriginal communities not on whites having taken wealth from them, but rather on having given it to them in a misguided transfer of welfare money. He remembers a more intact community in the time before such transfers:

Everybody in Hope Vale of my generation or older grew up in a family, or household, where parents worked hard, the kids were looked after. They were bequeathed a real privilege.

Pearson is exactly right to identify these social norms as being a real privilege. It’s much easier to prosper when you are surrounded by people with a strong family and work ethic. Whites who aren’t exposed to this ethic in their homes or communities tend to experience the same loss of living standard as non-whites do.

There is one other way in which whiteness theorists have tried to explain white privilege. According to Peggy McIntosh, an American writer, she experiences a daily privilege as a white person on the following grounds:

- I can if I wish arrange to be in the company of people of my race most of the time.

- I can turn on the television or open to the front page of the paper and see people of my own race widely represented.

- I 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

- I can be pretty sure that if I ask to talk to the “person in charge”, I will be facing a person of my own race.

- I can easily buy posters, post-cards, picture books, greeting cards, dolls, toys and children’s magazines featuring people of my own race.

One way to criticise this approach is to point out that American blacks, who Peggy McIntosh is taking to be the oppressed group, don’t really have that much trouble finding their own areas to live in, or their own music, or food they like, or films and posters in which they feature.

The more important criticism, though, is once again a lack of coherence. White Americans are told endlessly that diversity is a blessing which will enrich their lives. Peggy McIntosh, though, is basing her case that whites are privileged on the idea that whites can more easily escape the effects of diversity than blacks.

In other words, to accept Peggy McIntosh’s argument requires us to believe that it is oppressive to live in diverse areas in which we are no longer the majority race. If this is the case, though, why would white Americans choose to accept diversity, if the consequences are really so undesirable?

In fact, the logical consequences of Peggy McIntosh’s argument go much further than this. If I lived in a country with a million white people, but not a single non-white, then I would not be privileged and I would not need to feel guilt about my existence. However, if a single non-white was allowed to live in my country, then I would be privileged in comparison to them, I would breach the morality of modern equality, and my identity would be called into question.

It seems to me that Peggy McIntosh needs to reconsider her intellectual assumptions as they lead her to political absurdities.

Identity

What else is wrong with whiteness studies? Remember Robinder Kaur? She was the Sikh woman I quoted above who told whites that there was no escape from their guilt.

As it happens, Robinder Kaur is an editor for a magazine called Kaurs. This magazine celebrates the identity of Sikh women as follows:

The magazine will encourage the Sikh woman to rediscover herself in the light of the glorious heritage and current meritorious achievements of the Sikh community.

And how does the magazine think that the Sikh community has prospered? The editor thinks that life is full of challenges, which leads to this advice:

… how to overcome these challenges and emerge as a winner? Hard work, confidence, dedication and, of course, the blessings of the Almighty are a sure recipe for success.

So we have here a clear double standard. For Robinder Kaur her own identity as a Sikh woman is a positive thing, and Sikhs are to think of their past as a “glorious heritage”. If Sikhs have done well it is due to hard work, confidence and dedication. For whites, though, there is only guilt. Our past is to be regarded negatively as a history of oppression of others, and our prosperity is unearned.

Obviously I don’t think whites should lamely accept such a double standard. It’s natural for Robinder Kaur to think of her own ethnic identity in positive terms, and we should follow her lead in regarding our own identity a similarly positive way. What kind of life would it be if we accepted the double standard in which our role, unlike others, was one of inescapable guilt? How could a psychologically healthy life be built on the assumptions of whiteness studies?

Racism

There’s one final issue to deal with. Whiteness theorists would regard themselves as being cutting edge anti-racists. Yet, in one further act of incoherence, it is they who are peddling a dangerous racism.

Whiteness theorists are creating a picture of whites as a “cosmic enemy”: as a force in the world standing in the way of justice and equality. Groups who are regarded this way shouldn’t be surprised to find themselves targeted for removal. Here, for instance, is the “solution” of Dr Noel Ignatiev, a Harvard academic and whiteness theorist, to the “problem” of whites:

The key to solving the social problems of our age is to abolish the white race.

… The goal of abolishing the white race is on its face so desirable that some may find it hard to believe that it could incur any opposition.

… we intend to keep bashing the dead white males, and the live ones, and the females too, until the social construct known as ‘the white race’ is destroyed – not ‘deconstructed’ but destroyed.

… treason to whiteness is loyalty to humanity.

The problem is that it’s not a few radical cranks pushing this line, but a growing academic movement within our universities. This movement has the power to influence the minds of students and to set an intellectual and political agenda. We should therefore be concerned about the appearance of whiteness studies and be ready to take up a political fight against it.

12 Responses

  1. Incoherent? Never mind that, try making the argument on the basis of facts and evidence before you erect straw men. Stop pointing the bone at your opponents and get the beam out or your own eye.

    > So we are meant to accept the idea that a “white race” exists not as a biological fact, but as a social construct – as something simply made up by society for its own purposes.

    Well, is race a “biological fact”? Not according to Craig Venter leader of the private enterprise version of the Human Genome Project.

    If you want to build your entire argument on the claim of a biological basis for race you better start sharpening up on your science. Want an example?

    What’s the major physical characteristic of the “Asiatic” race? Eyelids right? Want to know how many genes are involved? Less than 1. That’s right, not even an entire gene. The occluded eyelid effect is caused by a single DNA base pair.

    Your height is determined by more than that.

    As for not being a social construct, what was all that colonolist stuff about “the white mans burden” and the “ladder of humanity” that placed the “negroid race” at the bottom all about then? Wasn’t that a learned and socially transmitted attitude?

    Our “identity” or “feeling of place” comes from our relations within a community. If that isnt’ social what is?

    Get real Iain. Prejudice based hand waving of the sort being peddled by Mr Richardson might have been ok in the 19th century but it isn’t good enough for the modern world.

  2. JM
    Your comment is all over the place and as confused as your mangled metaphor that you use as your opening gambit.
    Your comment does not even go to the point of Mark’s piece, so I invite you to read the essay again because the aim is not to argue one way or the other that there is a substantial biological differences between people of different races, which is clearly not the case but to suggest that the underlying concepts that form the crux Of Whiteness studies is both wrong headed and pernicious. Which you would understand If you had done any reading at all on just what these racists are claiming and teaching.
    I bet that you have not even read one thing by any of the “Whiteness Studies” advocates cited in this piece. Both Mark and I have, and that is why we see so many problems with this sort of “scholarship”.

  3. More Cat Lady responses?

    ROFLMAO.

    You guys never cease to amaze me how alike you behave.

  4. > Your comment does not even go to the point of Mark’s piece,

    No. It goes to its basis. If I’m wrong perhaps you can summarise his tripe in somewhat less than 100 words (and yes I did read it all – it *is* tripe)

  5. JM
    You are new here and after a semi-reasonable start you have degenerated into this very ignorant line of argument.
    Now I have no patience with minions of the far left who think that they can come to my blog and shout the odds, especially when it is clear that they have not even done the reading, either of the piece itself or any of the background. If you want to convince me that you do know what the bone of contention with “whiteness studies” actually is then do so now or bugger off.
    :mad:

  6. Iain

    You haven’t answered my question:- in your view (and/or Mr Richardson’s), is race biologically based or socially based?

    If you believe it to be biologically based you should be aware that the science doesn’t back you up.

    If you believe it to be social, then Mr Richardson hardly has a point at all.

  7. JM
    To answer your question.
    I would say that some of the differences can be attributed to the sociology of different cultures but other differences can clearly be shown to have a biological basis( however insignificant they may be). It is not a dichotomy at all which is why the likes of “whiteness studies” is in fact so deeply flawed, given that it seeks to argue that all notions of race are social constructs and yet some races are either innately virtuous (the indigenous people) or pernicious (the “whites”). I start from the view point that we are All of us human beings of equal humanity no matter what or ethnicity or cultural heritage may be but “whiteness studies” advocates would brand me worthy of disdain because I am “white”. The nazi’s would, apart from the inversion of their own racial hierarchy, have no trouble at all with the logic of these advocates of racism.

  8. Really JM. It depends on what you define “race” to be.

    But aside from that we can see certain characteristics are prevalent within certain people groups. Certain indigenous peoples have a larger visual cortex in their brains, while others have greater proportions of muscles types over another.

  9. Iain

    Thanks for your kind response. Let’s take it as read that we both agree that “race” (however defined – thanks Elijah) is mostly “the sociology of different cultures” and that biological differences are insignificant.

    So, we’d have to agree that Mr Richardson’s view appears to be that biology is primary, at least from the way he presents his argument. Accusing the field of “incoherence” he observes:-

    “whiteness theorists dismiss the idea of really existing races and yet they recognise Aborigines as a real entity”

    which is a pretty clear statement of the piece’s central theme “these people claim race is social, but contradict themselves by recognizing biological groups and are therefore incoherent”. If you and I rewrite this as “race is social, but whiteness studies recognises social groups”, it is Mr Richardson’s argument that is incoherent, or at best pointless.

    Ok, so that leaves us with whether or not whiteness studies presents “some races [as] either innately virtuous … or pernicious”. Fair enough.

    But given that we agree that race is primarily socialogical _and_ “the white race” of Europe have historically claimed superiority, is that really a problem? Whiteness studies is simply taking a particular culture (or rather, related group of cultures) at their own historical measure and examining it socialogically. It could be worthy of study when many of those pernicious attitutes persist amongst some members of that group – take white supremicists for example. Is it a problem to say “this is a bad attitude”?

    Social science academics examining cultural attitudes can’t possibly be a problem can it? Isn’t that what they do?

    I hope we can agree that past European attitudes towards other peoples of the world have been pernicious, and to the extent they persist today, remain pernicious.

    Personally I think those attitudes are worthy of challenge.

  10. “If you believe it to be biologically based you should be aware that the science doesn’t back you up.” Can I sue my school. I was pretty convinced my skin color was in my DNA. I thought the post was o.k. The part that gets me the most is that Ignatiev is a real person whose books and scholarly work are real. The premise behind the thinking should concern people.

  11. JM
    The problem with whiteness studies is not that it offers condemnation to “white supremacists”(who are rightfully loathed by all sensible people) but that it offers nothing except inescapable guilt and approbation to anyone who has a background that meets their description of being “White”. So rather than attacking individuals or even movements like the supremacists you cite, whiteness studies demonises all people who have white skin. A racist position by any definition

  12. Iain

    “whiteness studies demonises all people who have white skin.”

    I don’t believe it does, but I’m afraid we’ll have to agree to disagree on this point.

    I believe that free and fearless enquiry has been a key part of the western intellectual tradition since at least Socrates, and if some people get upset some of the time I’m not going to get too excited.

    Besides, a university that doesn’t have a few ratbags – ratbaggery being mostly in the eye of the beholder after all – is not worth attending.

Comments are closed.