Encountering My Own Privilege
Encountering My Own Privilege
In addition, the author states that everyone should get rights and people should be treated the way they want to be treated even though they have a disability. Moreover, the author emphasizes that children and adults can do…
In Tal Fortgang “checking my privilege”, he describes what checking your privilege is and how it works against what it is trying to achieve: equality for all and realize the mistakes of the past. In it he also described the hardships his family has gone through to get to where it is today. After reading it I started to view the similarities between his family and mine.…
This essay highlights and discusses models of disability reflected in two separate articles (Appendices A and B). I will identify the models of disability they represent. Both have been recently featured in the Guardian newspaper and are stories on disabled people.…
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.…
Throughout the essay, “Becoming Disabled” by Rosemarie Garland-Thomas, her main claim that she argues is that she wants the disabled community to be politicized in the eyes of society. First, Garland-Thomas talks about politicizing disabilities into a movement. She compares and contrasts movements for race and sexual orientations to the movements about disability (2). Disability movements have not gained as much attention as race or sexual orientation movements because so many Americans do not realize how prominent disability separation is in America. She wants people to start recognizing that disability is just as important as race and other movements. Next, Garland-Thomas speaks about different types of disabilities and how they aren’t always…
Switzer, J. V. (2003). Disabled Rights: American Policy and the Fight For Equality. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press.…
In the book Privilege, Power, and Difference by Allan G. Johnson he talks about the different troubles and issues dealing with privilege, the differences in this society, power, gender and race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, social class, and disability standing. He talks about his own experiences backing it up with facts, memoirs, and other documents.…
In “Color Blind Privilege” by Gallagher, he demonstrates four ways the media, culture(food and music), and television, which influence discrimination and segregation between races.In the television show That’s So Raven, Raven was refused a job becuse she was black while her bestfriend Chelsea, who is white, was immediately offered the job. This relates to colorblindness because people believed that Raven wasn't offered the job because she wasn't good enough for the position but Raven was actually refused the job because she was African American. “Color Blindness allows whites to believe that segregation and racism are no longer an issue because it is now illegal for individuals to be denied…
In the 1970’s and 1980’s a civil rights based approach was developed by disabled people. Buildings were built in such a way that there was no access for wheelchairs. Information was produced in a way that disabled people could not use. Attitudes and stereotypes about a disabled person prohibited a disabled person from having the same opportunities as an able bodied person. Special services…
Yet within contemporary society inequality, oppression and discrimination are still being experienced by distinct groups, one of which is individual’s with physical disabilities.…
In this spellbinding lecture, the author of the bestselling White Like Me: Reflections on Race from a Privileged Son offers a powerful inside out look at race and racism in America, surveying the damage white privilege has done not only to people of color, but to white people themselves.…
Society comprises individuals and communities of remarkable diversity. In addition to racial, ethnic, social, economic, and religious differences, people also have physical differences, which include a wide spectrum of abilities. Along this spectrum lie a range of impairments, or disabilities, and to fully understand the implications of impairment and disability, it is important to define the two terms. In an effort to accomplish this, and to illustrate two opposing views on impairment and disability, the ideas of artist-activist Liz Crow and film director-producer Josh Aronson will be examined. In doing so, the argument will be made that in order to move toward a society where prejudice and barriers no longer…
While some in the media portray this new era as falling from the sky unannounced, thousands of men and women in the disability rights movement know that these rights were hard fought for and are long overdue. The american disabilities act is radical only in comparison to a shameful history of outright exclusion and segregation of people with disabilities. From a civil rights perspective the Americans with Disabilities Act is a codification of simple justice.…
The readings this week came in the form of an essay, and then a criticism of analysis of said essay. Peggy McIntosh’s 1988 essay “White privilege and male privilege: A personal account of coming to see correspondences through work in women’s studies” on the topic of white privilege was put under the lens in “McIntosh as Synecdoche”. Critics viewed it as incomplete and not productive in solving the problem of racism in the world. While there was much left unsaid about white privilege in her essay, it could be viewed as an important conversation starter about the topic.…
Since I was absent on the day the class participated in the privilege walk, I am researching the effects of privilege for this assignment. While researching I found a very interesting cartoon picture about privilege. So I can keep this short here is a link for the whole comic: http://thewireless.co.nz/articles/the-pencilsword-on-a-plate.…