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Reni Eddo-Lodge

Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race

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  • aujahnesampsonhas quoted5 years ago
    I can’t have a conversation with them about the details of a problem if they don’t even recognise that the problem exists
  • Muriel Pacheco Orozcohas quoted5 years ago
    There was a feeling among some that unemployed young black people chose not to work, and instead took up lives of social aggravation.
  • uchihahas quoted5 years ago
    The options are: speak your truth and face the reprisal, or bite your tongue and get ahead in life.
  • Jackiehas quoted5 years ago
    I am only acutely aware of race because I’ve been rigorously marked out as different by the world I know for as long as I can remember. Although I analyse invisible whiteness and ponder its exclusionary nature often, I watch as an outsider. I understand that this isn’t the case for most white people, who move through the world blissfully unaware of their own race until its dominance is called into question. When white people pick up a magazine, scroll through the Internet, read a newspaper or switch on the TV, it is never rare or odd to see people who look like them in positions of power or exerting authority. In culture particularly, the positive affirmations of whiteness are so widespread that the average white person doesn’t even notice them. Instead, these affirmations are placidly consumed. To be white is to be human; to be white is universal. I only know this because I am not.
  • mariaolufsanhas quoted5 years ago
    Even though I write about my experiences with so much contempt, feminism was my first love. It was what gave me a framework to begin understanding the world. My feminist thinking gave rise to my anti-racist thinking, serving as a tool that helped me forge a sense of self-worth. Finding it aged nineteen was perfect timing, equipping me with the skills to navigate adulthood, stand up for myself and work out my own values.
  • lucindagarzazhas quoted4 months ago
    In theory, nobody has a problem with anti-racism. In practice, as soon as people start doing anti-racist things, there is no end to the slew of commentators who are convinced anti-racists are doing it wrong. It even happens among people who consider themselves to be progressive
  • lucindagarzazhas quoted4 months ago
    This left-wing writer was angrier at people’s reactions to racism than the racism itself. This was the beginning of a backlash against conversations about white privilege
  • lucindagarzazhas quoted4 months ago
    white victimhood’:6 an effort by the powers that be to divert conversations about the effects of structural racism in order to shield whiteness from much-needed rigorous criticism.
  • lucindagarzazhas quoted4 months ago
    Because it’s a many-headed hydra, you have to be careful about the white people you trust when it comes to discussing race and racism. You don’t have the privilege of approaching conversations about racism with the assumption that the other participants will be on the same plane as you. Raising racism in a conversation is like flicking a switch.
  • lucindagarzazhas quoted4 months ago
    White privilege manifests itself in everyone and no one. Everyone is complicit, but no one wants to take on responsibility. Challenging it can have real social implications.
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