blutoski
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2006
- Messages
- 12,454
Two of your possibilities - situations without agency and the experience itself. I'd define the former as situations without racial intent. One aspect of privilege is the ability to say or do things with racial implications without realizing it. Consider the widely discussed phenomenon of white people asking to touch black people's hair.
I can vouch for that one. My wife gets several requests a week for a feel. People don't realize how offensive this is until somebody actually tells them. It's not obvious.
Another example is language choices. My sister is in a rural community that has zero Jews. The synonym for 'negotiate' around there is 'Jew down'. As in: "I put a price tag for $10 dollars on that used skillsaw, but he jewed me down to $7." In this case, I don't think they're very aware that they're subscribing to and perpetuating a negative stereotype. It's just an expression, and when I explained the ethnic slur to my sister, she stopped using it.