Title: Black Like Me by John Howard Griffin
1Black Like Me by John Howard Griffin
- Facilitated by Dr. Tonette Rocco
2The story
- A white man driven by a desire to facilitate
social justice lives as a black man for less than
a month - Is rescued once
- And goes between living as black and white for
about two weeks - Begins to truly understand the pervasive nature
of racism in this country
3Questions
- How many in this room identify as African
American? - How many in this room identify as white?
- Is this story exaggerated or realistic?
4Unpacking the invisible Knapsack (McIntosh, 1990)
- 1. I can if I wish arrange to be in the company
of people of my race most of the time. - 2. I can avoid spending time with people whom I
was trained to mistrust and who have learned to
mistrust my kind or me. - 3. If I should need to move, I can be pretty sure
of renting or purchasing housing in an area which
I can afford and in which I would want to live. - 4. I can be pretty sure that my neighbors in such
a location will be neutral or pleasant to me. - 5. I can go shopping alone most of the time,
pretty well assured that I will not be followed
or harassed. - 6. I can turn on the television or open to the
front page of the paper and see people of my race
widely represented. - 7. When I am told about our national heritage or
about "civilization," I am shown that people of
my color made it what it is. - 8. I can be sure that my children will be given
curricular materials that testify to the
existence of their race. (there is more in the
article) - Available http//seamonkey.ed.asu.edu/mcisaac/emc
598ge/Unpacking.html
5Some more questions
- How did Griffin use his white privilege during
his investigation? - What would a white man find if he became black in
2006? - Would your life be different if you were an
African American in 2006? - What rights would be taken away from you legally
if you were gay or lesbian in 2006?
6A brief history of racism
- Race is a relatively new concept. Ancient
civilizations, though they encountered and
included people from many different parts of the
world, did not make social distinctions based on
physical appearance. They distinguished people
according to customs and religion not race.
(Morro, nd)
7The building of a scientific theory of race
- Lord Bryce (1915) traced racism back to the
desire of the English to dominate the Irish from
at least the 12 century - Henry II described the Irish
- Wherefore this is a race of savages I say again
a race of utter savages. For not merely are they
uncouth of garb, but they also let their hair and
beards grow to outrageous length, something like
the newfangled fashion which has lately come in
with us. In short, all their ways are brutish and
unseemly (Barnard's 1910 translation of a
twelfth-century text by Giraldus Cambrensis,
quoted in Curtis p. 124).
8Theory of race (contd)
- The Spanish Inquisition was an extreme form of
religious persecution searching for Jews and
Moores by physical appearance and genealogy
beginning the notion of the hereditary nature of
social status - In the 1500s when the English encountered Natives
they associated them with the savage Irish which
is the beginning of the English thinking
themselves superior to other cultures
specifically those they colonized - In the 1600s when the English established the
slave trade they quickly reduced the Africans to
subhuman, inferior, and created a permanent
underclass to support the labor intensive system
of capitalism in existence
9Scientific theory of race (contd)
- Ashley Montague author of Mans most dangerous
myth the fallacy of race (1942/1997) - challenged the notion that race was a determinant
of behavior - He believed that the idea of racism came to be in
the late 18th century with the Linnaeus
classification system.
10Linnaeus classification
- Modern, scientific racial classification began
with Carolus Linnaeus in 1735, who classified
humans into four races, based mostly on
continental separation and, later, on skin color.
His four groups were - Americanus reddish, choleric, and erect hair
black, straight, thick wide nostrils, scanty
beard obstinate, merry, free paints himself
with fine red lines regulated by customs. - Asiaticus sallow, melancholy, stiff hair black
dark eyes severe, haughty, avaricious covered
with loose garments ruled by opinions. - Africanus black, phlegmatic, relaxed hair
black, frizzled skin silky nose flat lips
tumid women without shame, they lactate
profusely crafty, indolent, negligent anoints
himself with grease governed by caprice. - Europeaeus white, sanguine, muscular hair long,
flowing eyes blue gentle, acute, inventive
covers himself with close vestments governed by
laws (Smedley, 1993, p. 164).
11Science backed the theory of race
- Several other scientists introduced racial
classifications - Buffon, (1745) is credited with introducing the
word race and had six divisions - later in the 1700s Blumembach had five divisions
12Race
- This ill conceived notion of race as science has
supported eugenics movements, standardized
testing, etc. - This science is used to rationalize, justify and
support social, political, and economic
degradation of marginalized groups - Yet we know the concept of race is not based in
biology but was socially constructed
13Racism
- Racism is conduct based on the belief that
physical and behavioral differences
characterizing individual members of different
groups or populations are determined by genetic,
that is, innate factors, and that these
differences enable one to rank each individual
and group in the scale of humanity according to
the attributed predefined values of those
differences (Montague 1942/1997, p. 47)
14Does racism still exist?
15What does it mean that this breakdown is
important?
- FIU, a public Carnegie extensive institution, is
the top producer of Hispanic graduates in the US
and the third largest producer of minority
graduates (52 Hispanic, 12 African-American,
and 4 Asian) (Landorf, Rocco, Nevin, 2006).
16 Oppression is
- Systematic institutional processes which prevent
some people from learning and using satisfying
and expansive skills in socially recognized
settings, or institutionalized social processes
which inhibit peoples ability to play and
communicate with others or to express their
feelings and perspectives on social life where
others can listen (Young, 1990, p. 38).
17Five faces of oppression are
- marginalization,
- powerlessness,
- cultural imperialism,
- systematic violence,
- and exploitation
- against the social group (Young, 1990).
18- Marginalization is the process of excluding
people from centers of power and influence such
as the system of labor (Young, 1990). - Powerlessness is evident in workplaces and urban
education centers where employees and students
have little or no say in policy decisions that
affect them directly.
19- Cultural imperialism involves two primary
dynamics. The first dynamic is the dominant
groups ability to render the particular
perspective of ones own group invisible (p.
56-57) making the dominant groups power implicit
and assumed. - At the same time, the second dynamic of cultural
imperialism stereotypes the group and labels it
the Other (Goffman, 1963).
20- exploitation occurs through paying the oppressed
group less for the same work, - or reducing the members to stereotypes such as
savage sexual predators
21- Violence is systemic because it is directed at
members of a group simply because they are
members of that group (Young, 1990, p. 62) . - The layers of systemic violence include acts of
violence, the threat of violence, and the lack of
punishment for the violence.
22Can you provide examples from the book for each
face of oppression? From 2006?
- marginalization,
- powerlessness,
- cultural imperialism,
- systematic violence,
- and exploitation
23The ultimate act of violence
- On June 7, 1998
- James Byrd died
- What do you know about this?
24An example of systematic violence
- Lynching is violence, usually murder, conceived
by its perpetrators as extra-legal execution, or
used as a terrorist method of enforcing social
domination. Victims of lynching have generally
been members of groups marginalized by society.
(Source Wikipedia)
25- What did you learn about race from Griffins
story that you didnt know?