Preview

Heteropatriarchy And The Three Pillars Of White Supremacy Summary

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
417 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Heteropatriarchy And The Three Pillars Of White Supremacy Summary
In “Heteropatriarchy and the Three Pillars of White Supremacy,” Andrea Smith proposes that organizing efforts for women of color have been ineffective, as they fail to recognize the heteropatriarchy framework undermining their platform. This political and social framework creates a divisive environment of “oppressive Olympics,” where groups are vying for the title of most beleaguered (66). In addition, numerous efforts to organize have been plagued by the sentiment that all minorities have experienced the same subjugations and consequently, share similar objectives for liberation (67). However, as Ms. Smith, demonstrates “racism and white supremacy…is (not) enacted in a singular fashion; rather, white supremacy is constituted by separate and distinct, but interrelated logics” (67). This premise serves as the backdrop for the three pillars of white supremacy; Slavery/Capitalism, Genocide/Colonialism and Orientalism/War, which all address how women of color are victimized in diverse ways. The first pillar of slavery/capitalism is based on the historic value of blacks as slaves, which implies they were not part of humanity but rather a commodity, “nothing more than property” (67). Unfortunately, even though slavery was abolished, this logic remains imbedded in the patriarchal system and is most evident in the “prison industrial complex” (67). The second pillar of genocide/colonialism states that for colonialism to exist, it must procure the resources of …show more content…
Furthermore, the author describes how any challenge to white supremacy must be based on “community relationships and mutual respect” that enables all WOC to cohesively confront the heteronormativity that is pervasive in our culture

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    James Balwin, affirms that is the notion of epistemic privilege, which develops as a result of unequal power relationships in societies. While power is often concentrated in the center of society, those individuals on the margins often gain the greatest appreciation of the existence and complexity of various forms of inequality. This appreciation grants them with a type of epistemic privilege. “The trouble about diversity, then, just that people differ from 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’.…

    • 200 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The prominence of the idea in the American psyche made it possible for Wells to influence the conversation on lynching and African Americans by labeling the whites as uncivilized for their passive and active support for the lynching of blacks. In response to the oppression and lynching, activism enabled the society to start finding African Americans as civilized, but significant hurdles remained. Similarly, the coverage on Charlotte Perkins Gilman exhibits the challenges that women were also facing as they sought recognition. White feminists argued that white women should be part of civilization (Bederman, 1995). However, a concern that arises in her coverage of the racially-based feminism is that the content is ineffective in advancing her argument on how manliness, race and civilization are related.…

    • 1409 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    In The Combahee River Collective Statement, Zillah Eisenstein addresses intersectionality by describing how race, sex and class are interrelated and all causes of oppression. The author explains how a collection of Black feminists are fighting against heterosexual, class, racial and sexual oppression. As a Black feminist, Zillah Eisenstein sees Black feminism as a “logical political movement to combat the manifold and simultaneous oppressions that all women of color face” (Eisenstein 1).…

    • 344 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    White Privilege Analysis

    • 390 Words
    • 2 Pages

    These White Privilege readings engage popular culture by defining white privilege through concrete evidence. Texts such as “White Privilege: Unpacking the Knapsack” ask the reader is to view a list of items that define white privilege. The reader is then asked to confirm whether or not the privileges are applicable to how he or she lives. As most white people realize just how applicable white privileges are to them, they can see that the problem is not just skin deep. The privileges white people have today are because of the white privileges available throughout history. In “The History of White People” the author unveils that most of what we study is a white man’s version of history, and therefore discredits other race’s contribution to history.…

    • 390 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    She uses her observation of men’s attitude toward their privileges, and their unwillingness to accept that they are over privileged, as an analogy to introduce her claim that white privileges are alike to male privileges. By transferring the importance and the seriousness of the women’s rights movement to her topic of white privilege, she combines ethos and pathos to persuade the readers that this is an important issue in our…

    • 2156 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    McIntosh (1990) asserts how many individuals of the white race an unaware that they attain “white privilege.” As white individuals are taught to not recognize their “conferred dominance,” many of these individuals believe that…

    • 723 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    McIntosh explains the advantages and ideas of lessening the white privilege. She demonstrates the positive and negative effects of white privilege, and what it means to have unearned power and strength. As well as what it looks like when we “unpack the knapsack”…

    • 627 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Writing Assignment #3

    • 870 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The article, “Whites Swim in Racial Preference” was extremely interesting and full of valuable information. The article clearly displayed numerous key terms from our text, in regards to racial inequality. These terms include, but are not limited to, social control mechanisms, discrimination, social stratification, and white privilege.…

    • 870 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    When thinking about the complexities of colored and poor women`s identity and Truth`s argument, many questions arise. Can those who did not actually do the work of “men” effectively use that argument to demand for equal rights? In African American Women`s History and the Metalanguage of Race, Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham writes on how race was used to justify the rubric of woman. She writes “Black women failed to receive as a pretense of protection, so widely accepted was the belief that the spread of the disease was inevitable because black women were promiscuous by nature.” In this excerpt, Higginbotham writes about the belief that certain sexually transmitted diseases were spreading among the black community because black women were promiscuous.…

    • 432 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    As we know it is very statistical for people of the dominant race to have a high position in the work force and usually people who have this position tend to look down to people who they believe are less than them. Especially in the workforce this is one place where it was always competitive and constantly having the knowledge that if you're not doing what needs to be done, you can easily be replaced without any hassle. In addition the factors that are related to work most prominently has three main components which include race, gender, and education. Unlike others some would disagree and say that I’m wrong and the factors to getting a job just deals with education, and in that manner they would be considered wrong. Moreover I say this because…

    • 1520 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Colonial Mindset Analysis

    • 819 Words
    • 4 Pages

    As Alex fights the heteronormative ideologies of her classmates, she unknowingly uses the idea of the decolonial imaginary. The colonial mindset still determines the relations of power, whether gendered or sexual or racial or classed, in our society. In order to challenge the colonial mindset, we have to decolonize our history. Instead of allowing the white, colonial, heteronormative gaze to construct our past, we must change the way we think about history. Emma Pérez writes, “I am arguing for decolonial gendered history to take us into our future with perspectives that do not deny, dismiss, or negate what is unfamiliar, but instead honors the differences between and among us” (Pérez 126). To escape the colonial mindset, we must not fall prey to what is easy. We have to accept the colored and queer events of our past and study them. Instead of questioning the femininity of girls like Alex, we must embrace their differences and accept them as who they truly…

    • 819 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In his book, Jenson reviews the history of racism in the United States and its evolution into a closeted mentality, which still holds a power over many non-white citizens. It is this subtle power relationship that Jensen contends is the reason why the United States is a white supremacist nation. With radical honesty, hard facts, and an abundance of difficult, personal experience, Robert Jensen lays out strategies for recognizing and dismantling white privilege. He attempts at demonstrating that if white people are to make a meaningful contribution to ending white supremacy, they have to be willing to be harsh in their assessment of themselves personally, while at the same time staying focused on the importance of a larger system of power. He believes that we have to go deeply into ourselves and simultaneously connect to a larger political analysis and movement. As Jenson expresses, our history books speak much more lightly on the evolution of our country, which minimizes our responsibility of creating and maintaining this white supremacist society we have developed. Jensen’s approach on addressing this topic is to create emotion, and provoke questioning the foundations we have built our belief systems upon, which could easily take a reader down a path of frustration, anger, confusion and sadness. I personally felt all of these emotions, and more, while reading this book.…

    • 1002 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    White Supremacy In America

    • 1489 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Many centuries ago, America was established by the great thirteen colonies. These colonies came from European countries, when the thirteen colonies were established they originally wanted this country to be white supremacy. As the United States also expanded to the west, this mentality always stuck. In all my years of learning about the history of the United States, I always learned that before the colonist arrived to this land, there where Native Americans already living here. These people who came from another world, robbed the land from natives. The colonist White supremacy idea was always the goal through the establishment of this country. As our country grew our diversity of people grew as well; the white people brought Africans Americans…

    • 1489 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    White Supremacy

    • 1587 Words
    • 7 Pages

    The notion that racism is a violation of human rights is not a new one, as those who have experienced it effects would testify. The ground-breaking progress gained by the civil rights movement of the 1960s in the United States has steadily eroded over the past decade, and the issues and incidents of racism as well as anti-Semitism, homophobia, and violence against women are ones that need to be addressed with increasing urgency. While the courts are more and more frequently relying on civil rights laws to prosecute racially motivated violence, the common abuses of basic human rights are often overlooked. In fact, the encroachment of white supremacist ideologies into the social fabric of our politics, our institutions, and our laws means that intolerance…

    • 1587 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Sara Ahmed’s critique of white studies centered itself around the problems that arise when white people attempt to critically evaluate the role their own complacency has played in propagating white privilege. Ahmed points out, through her six declarations on whiteness, that the main issue associated with white studies is that, in its attempt to present itself as not self-serving, most of what actually results serves to reinforce the dominance of whiteness and prioritize the feelings of white individuals over those that the writer, whether deliberately or inadvertently, has deemed as “other”. Ahmed would have focused on the self serving elements of Peggy McIntosh’s piece, deconstructing McIntosh “unpacking of [the] invisible knapsack”. In doing so, Ahmed would seek to reveal that despite how commendable McIntosh’s intentions may have first appeared, her piece is actually far more beneficial for her than it beneficial for actually resolving the problems of white privilege.…

    • 605 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays