It is a clear and cold morning but Face Book is loaded with warm wishes.
Happy New Year.
Indeed.
My daughter has reminded me that four years ago we were on a Carnival cruise to the Bahamas. That was so much fun.
The cruise had randomly assigned us to a table of total strangers that turned out to be a miracle of sorts. The characters, from all over the country and world, mingled and interacted so well that everyone thought we were old friends from the start.
I am trying to get a photo out of my archives to show but that may take a while. In the meantime, it is an extraordinary mental exercise revisiting those snippets of sheer pleasure where no one had an agenda...no rules...and living in the moment was enough.
We visited the piano bar one night. The pianist was very obliging for his "Jersey Girls" and we asked him to play Jerry Lee Lewis' "Balls of Fire". The piano started pounding and he gave a enthusiastic impression of the master. We had most of our dining group present.... and I even had a moment of madness and tried to dance.
The exuberant group and dancing spilled out into the corridor just in time for a visit from the ship's top brass. By this time the small lounge was packed. The Captain and Cruise Director had popped in to see what the noise was all about... and gave a thumbs up.
After they left, our pianist cheered....he said we just got him a positive review. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah!
Of course we gave him a handsome tip. We dropped in the next evening and his substitute told us that he couldn't talk after singing and playing our session and needed a day off. We were hoarse too...but a round of Cosmos fixed that.
Sometimes we need to remember that joy is a common quantity.
Sunday, January 1, 2017
Incorporating Inclusiveness in the New Year
Reflections
on Intersectionality
Systems of privilege
and inequality exist in culture and are marked by differences that relate to a
norm. When norms are broken, there are consequences. Women and Gender Studies is
a means to analyze the complicated interactions of multiple identities.
Awareness of privilege and discrimination, as related to perspectives and
context, can contribute to change. In her essay “Intersectionality”, Vivian M.
May says, “Intersectionality calls for analytic methods, modes of political
action, and ways of thinking about persons, rights, and liberation informed by
multiplicity.”(WVFV 81)
Normative and
conventional elements run like power cables under a building, unseen, but the
source of all available energy to drive essential services. Stereotypes operate
as short cuts, speed up society, but result in unequal treatment of
nonconforming groups. Intersectionality points
out these areas of oppression of all forms, not just sexism and racism, in
order to pinpoint different aspects that contribute to disharmony. It is crucial
to ferret out those elusive elements which lurk in individual experience to influence
context.
May points out that
“Some forms of dependence (heteronormative, middle class) are more idealized
(e.g., women’s dependence on men who are their fathers or husbands for
protection and care), whereas others are stigmatized as deviant and in need of
remediation (e.g., poor women’s dependency on the state via welfare) (80)”. One is socially approved; the other perceived
negatively.
In the case of
disability issues, intersectionality may actually diminish activism. The issues
are indistinguishable from each other when placed in opposition, as “enabled”
versus “disabled”. The accent on
oppression diminishes universal issues of handicapped persons because it assumes
a political norm for physical lack of access. By insisting on classism and racism to prove
discrimination, intersectionality interferes with change predicated on
disability and gender.
Alison Kafer, writing
in Feminist, Queer Crip, voices her
concerns about cultural and social stigma from stereotypes concerning persons
outside the hetereonormative existence. The FBL billboards messages emphasize
“courage”, “determination”, “opportunity”. She says, “Who is involved in
determining the characteristics valued in a particular community? Who is
included in—or excluded from---the community itself? (100)” The pop culture
approach to the physically disabled, as only needing to work harder, or change
their attitudes toward their limitations, must be contested. She advocates for
activism and dissent.
May says,
“Intersectionality offers a vision of future possibilities that can be more
fully realized once a shift toward the multiple takes place”. (81) When surface assumptions create a norm that
seems to accommodate most of the population, it runs the danger of becoming
stagnant. One example, concerning Brazil, is found in Intersectionality by Patricia Hill Collins and Sirma Bilge. Since
Brazil has a history of colonial invaders intermarrying with native peoples, it
has promoted a policy of racial democracy. This seems inclusive on the surface, but a
group of feminists with African roots gathered to protest being homogenized.
Coming together as African-centered women to preserve heritage is a
locus-resource for non-blacks to experience.
Narrowing into specific interest groups
therefore provides an almost infinite number of intersections. This “shift
toward the multiple” fertilizes the imagination and stimulates change. What might seem counter-productive for Brazil’s
political theory of racial democracy, might lead to other groups following
their example. What may seem positive, by subscribing to popular community
values, is actually counter-productive for a disabled individual whose
perspective from a bed or chair will never change. Piercing the stereotype of limitations will go
a long way to enable empathy and activism. This heightened awareness of the
“other”, whether racism, sexism, classism, or crip, will result in greater
sensitivity and appreciation for all kinds of diversity.
Understanding the approaches that enable tolerance among human beings of all races, cultures, and ranges of ability is absolutely necessary for survival of the species.
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