"When Tal Fortgang was told, 'Check your privilege'—which is a flip, get-with-it kind of statement—it infuriated him, because he didn’t want to see himself systematically. But what I believe is that everybody has a combination of unearned advantage and unearned disadvantage in life. Whiteness is just one of the many variables that one can look at, starting with, for example, one’s place in the birth order, or your body type, or your athletic abilities, or your relationship to written and spoken words, or your parents’ places of origin, or your parents’ relationship to education and to English, or what is projected onto your religious or ethnic background. We’re all put ahead and behind by the circumstances of our birth. We all have a combination of both. And it changes minute by minute, depending on where we are, who we’re seeing, or what we’re required to do."
Joshua Rothman at The New Yorker talks with Peggy McIntosh, author of "White Privilege and Male Privilege: A Personal Account of Coming to See Correspondences Through Work in Women’s Studies" in 1988.
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
The Privilege Checker
Labels:
1980s,
class,
education,
gender,
race and ethnicity,
sexuality,
sociology,
twentieth century,
twenty-first century
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