Defining Racism
“Can we talk?”
Early in my teaching career, a White student I knew asked me what
shat T
I would be teaching the following semester. I mentions
would be teaching a course on racism. She replied, with some sur-
prise in her voice,"Oh, is there still racism?” I assured her that indeed
there was and suggested that she sign up for my course. Fifieen years
later, after exhaustive media coverage of events such as the Rodney
King beating, the Charles Stuart and Susan Smith cases, the O. J
‘Simpson trial, the appeal co racial prejudices in electoral politics, and
the bitter debates about affirmative action and welfare reform, it
seems hard co imagine that anyone would still be unaware of the
reality of racism in our society. But in fact, in almost every audience
address, there is someone who will suggest that racism is 3 thing of
the past. There is always someone who hasn't noticed the xereotyp-
of people of color in the media, who hasn't observed the
housing discrimination in their community, who hasn't read the
newspaper articles about documented racial bias in lending practices
among well-known banks, who isn't aware of the racial tracking
pattern at the local school, who hasn't seen the reports of rising inci-
dents of racially motivated hate crimes in America—in short, some-
one who hasn't been paying attention to issues of race. But if you are
paying attention, the legacy of racism is not hard to see, and we are
all affected by it
The impact of racism begins early. Even in our preschool years,
wwe are exposed to misinformation about people different from our-
borhoods where we had limited
selves. Many of us grew up in nei
opportunities to interact with people different from our own families
34 Abotinition of Terms
When I ask my college students, "How many of you grew up in
neighborhoods where most of the people were from the same racial
gronp ac your own?” almost every hand goes up. There is still a great
deal of social segregation in our communities. Consequently, most of
the early information we receive about “others"—people racially, reli-
giously, or socioeconomically different from ourselves—does not
come as the result of firsthand experience. The secondhand informa~
tion we do receive has often been distorted, shaped by cultural stereo-
types, and left incomplete
Some examples will highlight this process, Several years ago one
of my students conducted a research project investigating preschool-
cers’ conceptions of Native Americans.’ Using childken at a local day
care center as her participants, he asked these three- and four-year-
olds to draw a picture of a Native American, Most children were
stumped by her request, They didn’t know what a Native American
‘was, But when she rephrased the question and asked them to draw a
picture of an Indian, they readily complied. Almost every picture
included one central feature: feathers. In fact, many of them also
ineluded a weapon—a knife or tomahawk—and depicted the person
in violent or aggressive terms. Though this group of children, almost
all of whom were White, did not live near a lange Native American
population and probably had had litde if any personal interaction
with American Indians, chey all had internalized cn image of what
Indians were like, How did they know? Cartoon images, in particu-
lar the Disney movie Peter Pan, were cited by the children as their
‘number-one source of information. At the age of three, these children
already had a set of stereotypes in place. Though I would not describe
three-year-olds as prejudiced, the stereotypes to which they have
heen exposed become the foundation for the adult prejudices so
many of us have.
Sometimes the assumptions we make about others come not
from what we have been told or what we have seen on television or
in books, but rather fom what we have not been told. The distortion
of historical information about people of color leids young people
Defining Rasism 5
{and older people, too) to make assumptions that may go unchal-
lenged for a long time. Consider this conversation between two
White students following a discussion about the cultural transmission
of racism:
‘Yeah, I just found out that Cleopatra was actually a Blick
“What
‘The first student went on to explain her newly learned informa
tion. The second student exclaimed in disbeli
‘Cleopatra was beautifill”
‘What had this young woman learned about who in our so
is considered beautiful and who is not? Had she conjured up images
of Elizabeth Taylor when she thought of Cleopatra? The new infor-
‘mation her classmate had shared and her own deeply ingrained
assumptions about who is beautiful and who is not were too inccn-
gruous to allow her to assimilate the information at that moment,
Omitted information can have similar effects. For example,
another young woman, preparing to be a high school English teacher,
expressed her dismay that she had never learned about any Black
authors in any of her English courses, How was she to teach abcut
them to her future students when she hadn't learned about them her-
sel A White male student in the class responded to this discussion
‘That can’t be true
with irustration in his response journal, writing “It’s not my faule that
Blacks don't write books.” Had one of his elementary, high school, or
college teachers ever told him that there were no Black writers?
Probably not. Yet because he had never been exposed to Black
authors, he had drawn his own conclusion that there were none.
Stereotypes, omissions, and distortions all contribute to the devel-
‘opment of prejudice. Prejudice is a preconceived judgment or opinion,
Usually hated on limited information. I assume that we all have pre)
uudices, not because we want them, but simply because we ate so con-
tinually exposed to misinformation about others. Though I have often
hheard students or workshop participants describe someone as not
hhaving “a prejudiced bone in his body.” I usually suggest that they6 ADefinition of Terms
P e of the inescapable consequences of living
look again. Prejudice is one of th P
in a racist society, Cultural racism—the cultural images and messages
that affirm the assumed superiority of Whites and the assumed i
riority of people of color—is like smog in the air. Sometimes itis so
thick ti isle oter sie es apparent, bu aay ay in and
would introduce ourselves
day out, we are breathing it in. None of us w “
jog-breathers” (and most of us don't want co be described
Psd, bi een gy hw we
Ting i or one whe
: 14s and family members, and are
exposed to the ethnic jokes of frie
r of the accomplishments of oppressed groups, we will
rarely inform:
develop the negative categorizations of those groups that form the
basis of prejudice
People of color a well x Whites develop thse ctgorintions
Even a member of the stereotyped group may internalize the stereo-
typical categories about his or her own group to some degree. In fact,
spoon Smt ofthe vonegurnes af being the dred mes
sages about one’ own group will be dscused in subsequent chapters
Cevaily some people ate moe prejudiced than ater, ate
Iy embracing and perpetung neve and hateful image of thoxe
whoa ile orm shes When we im 1 eo
Trongen: Bur ave of comple nocen Prue an ne
preschools my tent interviewed are not fo blame fr the neg
nd esion that shaped ur chinking we ew op
ve of esponsiy,
distortions, »
“To say that itis not our fault does not 1
however. We may not have polluted the air, but we need to take
responsibility along with others, for cleaning it up. Each of us needs
to look at our own behavior. Am I perpetuating and reinforcing the
negative messages so pervasive in our culture, or am I seeking to chal-
Defining Racism 7
lenge them? If T have not been exposed to positive images of mar~
sginalized groups, am I secking them out, expanding my own knowl
edge bise for myself and my children? Am I acknowledging and
examining my own prejudices, my own rigid categorizatons of oth-
ers, thereby minimizing the adverse impact they might have on my
interactions with those I have categorized? Unless we engage in these
and other conscious acts of reflection and teeducation, we easily
repeat the process with our children, We teach what we were taught
The unexamine
4d prejudices of the parents are passed on 10 the chil-
dren. It is not our fault, but it is our responsibility to incerrupt this
cycle
acism: A System of Advantage Based on Race
‘Many people use the terms prej
fie and racism interchangeably. 1 do
not, and I think it is important to make a distinction. In his book
Portraits of White Racism, David Wellman atgues convincingly that lim
iting our understanding of racism to prejudice does not oifer a suffi-
cient explanation for the persistence of racism. He defines racism as
“system of advantage based on race” In illustrating this definition, he
provides example after example of how Whites defend theit racial
advant
‘access to better schools, housing, jobs—even when they
do not embrace overtly prejudicial thinking, Racism cannot be fully
explained as an expression of prejudice alone.
This definition of racism is useful because it allows us to see that
racism, like other forms
of oppression, is not only a personal ideol-
ogy based on racial
judice, but a system involving cultural messages
and institutional policies and practices as well as the belief and
actions of individuals. nthe context of the United States, this system
clearly operates to the advantage of Whites and to the
of people of color. Another related definition of racis
used by antiracist educators and consultants
disdvantage
», commonly
prejudice ples power
ower—access to social,
‘Racial prejudice when combined with social p
‘cultural, and economic resources and decision-making
Aezds to the8 ADetinition of Terms
institutionalization of racist policies and practices. While I think this
definition also captures the idea that racism is more than individual
belief and attitudes, | prefer Wellman's definition because the idea of
systematic advantage and disadvantage is critical to an understanding
of how racism operates in American society
In addition, I find that many of my White students and workshop
participants do not feel powerful. Defining racism as prejudice plus
power has litele personal relevance. For some, their response to this
definition is the following: "I'm not really prejudiced, and I have no
However, most White
power, so racism has nothing to do with me
people, if they are really being honest with themselves, can see that
there are advantages to being White in the United States. Despite the
‘current thetorie about affirmative action and “reverse racism," every
social indicator, from salary to life expectancy, reveals the advantages
of being White.”
‘The systematic advantages of being White are often referred to as
White privilege. In a now well-known article, “White Privilege:
‘Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack," Peggy MeIntosh, a White femi-
nist scholar, identified a long list of societal privileges that she received
simply because she was White.‘ She did not ask for them, and itis,
important to note that she hadn't always noticed that she was receiv-
ing them. They included major and minor advantages. Of course she
enjoyed greater access to jobs and housing. But she also was able to
shop in department stores without being followed by suspicious sales-
people and could always find appropriate hair care products and
makeup in any drugstore, She could send her child to school confi-
dent that the teacher would not discriminate against him on the basis
of race. She could also be late for meetings, and talk with her mouth
fall, fairly confident that these behaviors would not be attributed to
the fact that she was White. She could express an opinion in a meet
ing or in print and net have it labeled the “White” viewpoint. In
other words, she was more often than not viewed as an individual,
rather than as a member ofa racial group.
Defining Racism 9
This ance ngs tue for most White rade, many of whom
say have never considered the beneis of being Whit Is one ing
to have enough aware of racism o describe he aye tat people
of color are dsvantaged by ic But ths new undertaning of son
is more eve In very concee term it meats tat fs pers af
color isthe victim of housing drimination, the sparen the
would oserwie have been rented to that enon ofa esl a
2b fora White person The Whi tenants aowingly ot unk
ingly the boner of ci, a sem of tdanage bed on ew
but she bene om ic anyay
sysem clic conidenbe pain, offen accompanied by feng of
znger and pu These uncomorable emotions can hides feher
Sscusion. We sil kero think tht we deserve the god things we
ave recived nd that others coo, ge wis they deere Soc py
chological this tendency a“beiefin jus world” Racin dite
I contacts such noon of jc
Understanding acon ytm of adtaage based on rice i
those who have imenized this myth, ths deinion genes con
Sderable dicomforeIeis more comforabl simpy to think o con
22 particule form of prejudice. Notions of power or priege de
tot have tobe ates when our andentnting str tse
The dscomoregensrted when a sysemie definition of chm i
inwodueed is ually gute ible inthe wodshop I lend. Someone
inthe group uly quick to point out tha ths eno the dete
ton you wil find in tow dictionaries. I epy"Who woe the ee
tionary?" Iam not being ficetious with hs sponse Whore ines
sre by ape en dnton ome? I por
do not acknowledge its existence. Bes perpccnned wt10 A Definition of Terms
For Whites Oniy?
Racist
Frequently someone will say "You keep talking about White people
People of color can be racist, 00." I once asked a White teacher what
iz would mean to her if a student or parent of color accused her of
beingracist, She said she would fel as though she had been punched
in the stomach or called a “low-life scurn” She is not alone in this
feeling. The word racist holds a lot of emotional power. For meny
White people, to be called racists the ulimate insult. The idea that
this term might only be applied to Whites becomes highly problem
atic for afterall, cant people of color be “low-life scum” too?
Cf course, people of any racial group can hold hatefil attitudes
and behave in racially discriminatory and bigoted ways. We can all cite
examples of horrible hate crimes which have been perpetrated by
people of color at well s Whites. Hateful behavior is hateful behav~
ior no matter who does it. But when I am asked, "Can people of
color be racist?” I reply, “The answer depends on your definition of
racism.” If one defines racism as racial prejudice, the answer is yes,
People of color can and do have racial prejudices. However, if one
defines racism as a system of advantage based on race, the answer is
no. People of color are not racist because they do not systematically
benefit from racism. And equally important, there is no systematic
cultural and institutional support or sanction for the racial bigotry of
people of color. In my view, reserving the term racist only for behav
iors committed by Whites in the context of a White-dominated soci
ety is a way of acknowledging the ever-present power differential
afforded Whites by the culture and institutions that make up the sys
tem of advantage and continue to reinforce notions of White superi
rity. (Using the same logic, I reserve the word sexist for men. Though
‘women can and do have gender-based prejudices, only men system
atically benefit ffom sexism.)
Despite my hest efforts to explain my thinking on this point,
there are some who will be troubled, perhaps even incensed, by my
response.To call the racially motivated acts of a person of color acts
Detining Racism 11
of rac bigotry and to describe sii ac commited by Whies
i will make no ene to some peepee
cole T tho wo diaper” At
Even if you dont like the definition of ram tam axing, hope
eI will respectfully say,“‘We can agree t
you are now clear about what itis | also understand how. you are
‘sing the term, our conversation can continue—despite our disagree-
Another provocative question I'm offen asked is “Are you saying
all Whites are racist” When asked this question, | again remember
that White teacher's response, and I am. conscious that perhaps the
question Iam really being asked is,"Are you saying all Whites are bad
people?” The answer to that question is of course not, However, all
White people, intentionally or unintentionally, do benefit from
racism. A more relevant question is what are White people as individ-
uals doing to interrupt racism? For many White people, the image of
a racist is a hood-wearing Klan member or a name-calling Archie
Bunker figure. These images represent what might be called acti
racism, blatant, intentional acts of racial
igotry and discrimination
Passive racism is more subtle and can be seen in the collusion of laugh-
ing when a ra
joke is told, of letting exclusionary hiring practices
0 unchallenged, of accepting as appropriate the omissions of people
of color from the curriculum, and of avoiding difficult race-related
issues, Because racism is so
ined in the fbi of American ia
ition, is easly sekperperning Al dha tested to unt
walkway at the airpc _
Active rc behaviors equal cove
fon the conveyor bee The person engaged inate asic hehe
ihas denied with the idecogy of White sopenay ands no
nding still on
the walkway. No overt effort is being made, but the conveyor belt
moves the bystanders along to the same destination as those who are
actively walking, Some of the bystanders may feel the motion of the12 A Definition of Terms
comer bee the aie ahead of hand hoof 8m
amin to go to the same desinadon as the Whit
emacs But ules they ate waling actively in the opposite
seca pec Ene than the comeyor belts they ate
say vntiacke they wil ind hemseles eed along withthe
Sno ll Whies re actively ait. Many ate pasiely ect
sons, though nt esvugh ae aetly niacit The lant gue
font not thas White se acbt how we on move MoT
are Pte go Thc eof nenapeng i's evi mt he
TE or Wnts slone. But the fcr of White privilege means cha
formation Te whom much gen, mich equied
Ts uapovant scone har wie al Whites bene om
saci they donot al Beet equal, Oser ft, such 5 s30-
sree and phyla aby ao pay azole in oUF acces to soil
intuence an power A White womanon wees nox privileged
sre onan wealthy Whe herrea man Ta her che
aecrrcc dkadantge of sexism and ch itenect with he
“ie pegs bute peg ist here Ths point was bought
Meet me ma 1984 tudy conducted by « Mount Halyoke gra
retary Weneworh? Wensworh interviewed 2 gro of
aie otoge andes oho wee bh older than their pets and
crn heb uber of thee nes toad cole sout the
"pe th lad ther college All ofthe women interviews
vr White fom workings Backgrounds, fom fami: wher
weer expected ogeadute om high school and get maried
were job Seal ha experienced abuse elaonshps and ote
oat eats poor wo comang fo college Yet hi experince
punctate by good luk" stre of apartments obtained wit
out a deposit, good jobs offered without experience or extensive ref-
ference checks, and encouragement provided by willing mentors
Detining Racism 13
While the women acknowledged their good fortune, none of them
discussed their Whiteness. They had not considered the possibility :hat
being White had worked in their favor and helped give them the ben=
efit of the doubt at critical junctures. This study clearly showed that
even under difficult circumstances, White privilege was stil operating,
Itis also true that not all people of color are equally targeted by
racism. We all have multiple identities that shape our experience. [can
describe myself as a light-skinned, well-educated, heterosexual, able-
bodied, Christian Aftican American woman raised in a middle-class
suburb. As an African American woman, I am systematically disadvan-
taged by race and by gender, but I systematically receive benefits in
the other categories, which then mediate my experience of racism
and sexism, When one is targeted by multiple isms—racism, sexism,
classism, heterosexism, ableism, anti-Sernitism, ageism—in whatever
combination, the effect is intensified. The particular combination of
racism and classism in many communities of color is life-threatening,
Nonetheless, when I, the middle-class Black mother of two sons, read
another story about a Black man’s unlucky encounter with a White
police officers deadly force, I am reminded that racism by itelf can
kill.
The Cost of Racism
Several years ago, a White male student in my psychology of racism
course wrote in his journal at the end of che semester that he had
learned a lot about racism and now understood in a way he never had
before just how advantaged he was. He also commented that he
didn't think he would do anything to ty to change the situation.
Aer all, the system was working in his favor. Fortunately, his response
‘was not typical. Most of my students leave my course with the desire
(and an action plan) to interrupt the cycle of racism, However, this
young man’s response does raise an important question. Why should
Whites who are advantaged by racism want to end that system of
advantage? What are the casts of that system to them?14 A Definition of Terms
‘A Money magazine article called “Race and Money” chronicled
the many ways the American economy was hindered by institutional
racism," Whether one looks at productivity lowered by racial tensions
in the workplace, or real estate equity lost through housing discrimi-
nation, or the tax revenue lost in underemployed communities of
color, or the high cost of warehousing human talent in prison, the
economic costs of racism are real and measurable.
‘As a psychologist, I often hear about the less easily measured
costs. When I ask White men and women how racism hurts them,
they frequently talk about their fears of people of color, the social
incompetence they feel in racially mixed situations, the alienation
they have experienced becween patents and children when a child
marries into a family of color, and the interracial friendships they had.
as children that were lost in adolescence or young adulthood without,
their ever understanding why. White people are paying a significant
price for the system of advantage. The cost is not as high for Whites
as itis for people of color, but a price is being paid.’ Wendell Berry, a
White writer raised in Kentucky, captures this psychic pain in the
‘opening pages of his book, The Hidden Wound:
If white people have suffered less obviously from racism
than black people, they have nevertheless suffered great
ly; the cost has been greater perhaps than we can yet
know. If the white man has inflicted the wound of
racism upon black men, the cost has been that he would
1age of that wound into himself. As
the master, or as a member of the dominant race, he has
receive the mirror i
felt little compulsion to acknowledge it or speak of it,
the more painful it has grown the more deeply he has
hidden ie within himself, But che wound is there, and it
id as
is a profound disorcer, as great a damage in his mi
it is in his society.
The dismantling of racism is in the best interests of everyone.
Defining Racism 15
Word About Language
‘Throughout this chapter I have used the term White to refer to
Americans of European descent. In another era, I might have used the
term Caucasian. I have used the term people of color to refer to those
groups in America that are and have been historically targeted by
racism. This includes people of Affican descent, people of Asian
descent, people of Latin American descent, and indigenous peoples
Gometimes referred to as Native Americans or American Indians)"
ly as non-Whites. This
term is particularly offensive because it defines groups of people in
terms of what they are not. (Do we call women “non-men?") I also
‘Many people refer to these groups colle
avoid using the term minorities because it represents another kind of
distortion of information which we need to correct. So-called
minorities represent the majority of the world’s population. While the
term people of color is inclusive, itis no: perfect. As a workshop partic
ipant once said, White people have color, too. Perhaps it would be
more accurate to say “people of more color." though I am not ready
0 make that change. Perhaps fellow psychologist Linda James Myers
js on the right track. She refers to two groups of people, those of
acknowledged Aftican descent and those of unacknowledged African
descent, reminding us that we can all trace the roots of our common
humanity to Agrica,
1 refer to people of acknowledged Aftican descent as Black. |
know that African Ameriaan is also a commonly used term, and I often
refer to myself and other Black people born and raised in America in
that way. Pethaps because I am a child of the 1960s “Black and beau-
tifal” era, I still prefer Black. The term: is more inclusive than African
American, because there are Black people in the United States who are
not African American—Afro-Caribbeans, for example—yet are tar~
sgeted by racism, and are identified as Black
When referring to other groups of color, I try to use the terms
that the people themselves want to be called. In some cases, there is
no clear consensus. For example, some people of Latin American16 A Definition of Terms
ancestry prefer Latino, while others prefer Hispanic or, if of Mexican
descent, Chicavio.” The terms Latino and Hispanic are used i
changeably here. Similatly, there are regional variations in the use of
and Indian. American Indian
tive American, and
the terms Native American, American I
and Native people are now more widely used than
the language used here reflects that, People of Asian descent include
Pacific Islanders, and that is reflected in the terms Asian/Pacific
Islanders and Asian Pacfic Americans. However, when quoting cthers 1
use whichever terms they use
My dilemma about the language to use ref
is a social construction.” Despite myths to the contrary, biologist tell
1s the fact that race
us that the only meaningful racial categorization is that of human. Van
den Berghe defines race asa group that is socially defined but on the
basis of physical criteria,” including skin color and facial features."
Racial identity development, a central focus of this book, usually
refers to the pr
cess of defining for ones
elf the personal significance
and social meaning of belonging to a particular racial group. The
terms racial identity and ethnic identity are often used synonymously,
though a distinction can be made between the two. An ethnic group
is a socially defined group based on cultural criteria, such as language,
customs, and shared history. An individual might identify as « mem:
ber of an ethnic group ([rish or Italian, for example) but might not,
think of himself in racial terms (as White). On the other hand, one
may recognize the personal
(identifying as Black, fori
nificance of racial group membership
ance) but may not consider ethnic iden:
tity Guch as West Indian) as particularly meaningful
Both racial and ethnic categories are socially constructed, and
social definitions of these categories have changed over time. For
example, in his book Ethnic Identity: The Transformation of White
‘chard Alba points out that the high rates of intermarriage
and the dissolution of other social boundaries among European eth~
nic groups in the United States have reduced the significance of eth~
nic identity for these groups. In their place, he argues, a new ethnic
identity is emerging, that of European American,
Detining Racism 17
Throughout this book, I refer primarily to racial identity It is
important, however, to acknowledge that ethnic identity and racial
identity sometimes intersect. For example, dark-skinned Puerto
Ricans may identify culturally as Puerto Rican and yet be categorized
racially by others as Black on the basis of physical appearance. In the
case of either racial or ethnic identity, these identities remain most
salient to individuals of racial or ethnic groups that have been histor-
jeally disadvantaged ot marginalized.
The language we use to categorize one another racially is imper-
fect. These categories are still evolving as the current debate over
Census classifications indicates." The original creation of racial cate-
ggories was in the service of oppression. Some may argue that to con-
tinue to use them is to continue that oppression. | respect that argu-
ment. Yet it is difficult to talk about what is essentially a flawed and
problematic social construct without using language that is itself
problematic. We have to be able to talk about it in order to change it
‘So this is the language I choose.