WHITE
PRIVILEGE AND MALE PRIVILEGE:
A Personal Account of Coming to See Correspondences’
Through Work in Women’s Studies’
Peggy McIntosh
Through work to bring
materials and perspectives from Women’s Studies into the rest of the
curriculum, I have often noticed men’s unwillingness to grant that they are
overprivileged in the curriculum, even though they may grant that women are
disadvantaged. Denials that amount to taboos surround the subject of advantages
that men gain from women’s disadvantages. These denials protect male privilege
from being fully recognized, acknowledged, lessened, or ended.
Thinking through
unacknowledged male privilege as a phenomenon with a life of its own, I
realized that since hierarchies in our society are interlocking, there was most
likely a phenomenon of white privilege that was similarly denied and protected,
but alive and real in its effects. As a white person, I realized I had been
taught about racism as something that puts others at a disadvantage, but had been
taught not to see one of its corollary
aspects, white privilege, which puts me at an advantage.
I think whites are carefully
taught not to recognize white privilege, as males are taught not to recognize
male privilege. So I have begun in an untutored way to ask what it is
like to have white privilege. This paper is a partial record of my personal
observations and not a scholarly analysis. It is based on my daily experiences
within my particular circumstances.
I have come to see white
privilege as an invisible package of unearned assets that I can count on
cashing in each day, but about which I was “meant”
I have appreciated commentary on this paper From the Working Papers
Committee of the Wellesley College Center (or Research on Women, From members
of the Dodge seminar, and from many individuals, including Margaret Andersen, Sorel Berman, Joanne Braxcon, Johnriella Buder, Sandra Dickerson, Marnie Evans, Beverly Guv-She&aU, Sandra Harding, Eleanor Hincon Hovit, Pauline
Houston, Paul Laucer, Joyce Miller, Mary Norris, Gloria Oden, Beverly Smith, and John ‘vValter.
0 1988 by Peggy McIntosh.
Reprinted with permission of the author.
to remain oblivious. White
privilege is like an invisible weightless knapsack of special provisions,
assurances, tools, maps, guides, codebooks, passports, visas, clothes, compass,
emergency gear, and blank checks.
Since I have had trouble
facing white privilege, and describing its results in my life, I saw parallels
here with men’s reluctance to acknowledge male privilege. Only rarely will a
man go beyond acknowledging that women are disadvantaged to acknowledging that
men have unearned advantage, or that unearned privilege has not been good for
men’s development as human beings, or for society’s development, or that privilege
systems might ever be challenged and changed.
I will review here several
types or layers of denial that I see at work protecting, and preventing
awareness about, entrenched male privilege. Then I will draw parallels, from my
own experience, with the denials that veil the facts of white privilege.
Finally, I will list forty-six ordinary and daily ways in which I experience
having white privilege, by contrast with my African American colleagues in the
same building. This list is not intended to be generalizable. Others can make
their own lists from within their own life circumstances.
Writing this paper has been
difficult, despite warm receptions for the talks on which it is
based.1 For describing white privilege makes one newly accountable.
As we in Women’s Studies work reveal male privilege and ask men to give up
some of their power, so one who writes about having white privilege must ask,
“Having described it, what will I do to lessen or
end it?”
The denial of men’s
overprivileged state takes many forms in discussions of curriculum change work.
Some claim that men must be central in the curriculum because they have done
most of what is important or distinctive in life or in civilization. Some
recognize sexism in the curriculum but deny that it makes male students seem
unduly important in life. Others agree that certain individual thinkers are male oriented
but deny that there is any systemic tendency in disciplinary frameworks or epistemology
to overempower men as a group. Those men who do grant that male privilege takes
institutionalized and embedded forms are still likely to deny that male
hegemony has opened doors for them personally. Virtually all men deny that male
overreward alone can explain men’s centrality in all the inner sanctums of our
most powerful institutions. Moreover, those few who will acknowledge that male
privilege systems have overempowered them usually end up doubting that we could
1. This paper was presented at the Virginia Women’s Studies Association
conference in Richmond in April, [986, and the American Educational Research
Association conference in Boston in October, 1986, and discussed with two groups of participants in
the Dodge seminars for Secondary School Teachers in New York and Boston in the
spring of 1987.
dismantle these privilege
systems. They may say they will work to improve women’s status, in the society
or in the university, but they can’t or won’t support the idea of lessening men’s.
In curricular terms, this is the point at which they say that they regret they
cannot use any of the interesting new scholarship on women because the syllabus
is full. When the talk turns to giving men less cultural room, even the most
thoughtful and fair-minded of the men I know will tend to reflect, or fall back
on, conservative assumptions about the inevitability of present gender
relations and distributions of power, calling on precedent or sociobiology and
psychobiology to demonstrate that male domination is natural and follows
inevitably from evolutionary pressures. Others resort to arguments from
“experience” or religion or social responsibility or wishing and dreaming.
After I realized, through
faculty development work in Women’s Studies, the extent to which men work from
a base of unacknowledged privilege. I understood that much of their
oppressiveness was unconscious. Then I remembered the frequent- charges from
women of color that white women whom they encounter are oppressive. I began to
understand why we are justly seen as oppressive, even when we don’t see
ourselves that way. At the very least, obliviousness of one’s privileged state
can make a person or group irritating to be with. I began to count the ways in
which I enjoy unearned skin privilege and have been conditioned into oblivion
about its existence, unable to see that it put
me “ahead” in anyway, or put my people ahead, over rewarding us and yet also
paradoxically damaging us, or that it could or should be changed.
My schooling gave me no
training in seeing myself as an oppressor, as an unfairly advantaged person, or
as a participant in a damaged culture. I was taught to see myself as an
individual whose moral state depended on her individual moral will. At school,
we were not taught about slavery in any depth; we were not taught to see
slaveholders as damaged people. Slaves were seen as the only group at risk of
being dehumanized. My schooling followed the pattern which Elizabeth Minnich
has pointed out: whites are taught to think of their lives as morally neutral,
normative, and average, and also ideal, so that when we work to benefit others,
this is seen as work that will allow “them” to be more like “us.” I think many
of us know how obnoxious this attitude can be in men.
After frustration with men
who would not recognize male privilege, I decided to try to work on myself at
least by identifying some of the daily effects of white privilege in my life.
It is crude work, at this stage, but I will give here a list of
special circumstances and conditions I experience that I did not earn but that
I have been made to feel are mine by birth, by citizenship, and by virtue of
being a conscientious law-abiding “normal” person of goodwill. I have chosen
those conditions that I think in my case attach .somewhat more to
skin-color
privilege than
to class, religion, ethnic status, or geographical location, though these
other privileging factors are intricately intertwined. As far as I can see, my
Afro-American co-workers, friends, and acquaintances with whom I come into
daily or frequent contact in this particular time, place, and line of work
cannot count on most of these conditions.
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 reasonably 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,
fairly well assured that I will not be followed or harassed by store
detectives.
6. I can turn on the television or open to the
front page of the paper and see people of my race widely and positively
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.
9. If I want to, I can be pretty sure of
finding a publisher for this piece on white privilege.
10. I can be fairly sure of having my voice heard
in a group in which I am the only member of my race.
11. I can be casual about whether or not to
listen to another woman’s voice in a group in which she is the only member of
her race.
12. I can go into a book shop and count on
finding the writing of my race represented, into a supermarket and find the
staple foods that fit with my cultural traditions, into a hairdresser’s shop
and find someone who can deal with my hair.
13. Whether I use checks, credit cards, or cash, I
can count on my skin color not to work against the appearance that I am
financially reliable.
14. I could arrange to protect our young children
most of the time from people who might not like them.
15. I did not have to educate our children to be aware
of systemic racism for their own daily physical protection.
16. I can be pretty sure that my children’s
teachers and employers will tolerate them if they fit school and workplace
norms; my chief worries about them do not concern others’ attitudes toward
their race.
17. I can talk with my mouth full and not have
people put this down to my color.
18. I can swear, or dress in
secondhand clothes, or not answer letters, without having people attribute
these choices to the bad morals, the poverty, or the illiteracy of my race.
19. I can speak in public to a
powerful male group without putting my race on trial.
20. I can do well in a
challenging situation without being called a credit to my race.
21. I am never asked to speak for
all the people of my racial group.
22. I can remain oblivious to the
language and customs of persons of color who constitute the world’s majority
without feeling in my culture any penalty for such oblivion.
23. I can criticize our
government and talk about how much I fear its policies and behavior without
being seen as a cultural outsider.
24. I can be reasonably sure that
if I ask to talk to “the person in charge,” I will be facing a person of my
race.
25. If a traffic cop pulls me over or if the IRS
audits my tax return, I can be sure I haven’t been singled out because of my
race.
26. I can easily buy posters, postcards, picture
books, greeting cards, dolls, toys, and children’s magazines featuring people
of my race.
27. I can go home from most meetings of
organizations I belong to feeling somewhat tied in, rather than isolated, out
of place, outnumbered, unheard, held at a distance, or feared.
28. I can be pretty sure that an
argument with a colleague of another race is more likely to jeopardize her
chances for advancement than to jeopardize mine.
29. I can be fairly sure that if
I argue for the promotion of a person of another race, or a program centering
on race, this is not likely to cost me heavily within my present setting, even
if my colleagues disagree with me.
30. If I declare there is a
racial issue at hand, or there isn’t a racial issue at hand, my race will lend
me more credibility for either position than a person of color will have.
31. I can choose to ignore
developments in minority writing and minority activist programs, or disparage
them, or learn from them, but in any case, I can find ways to be more or less
protected from negative consequences of any of these choices.
32. My culture gives me little fear about
ignoring the perspectives and powers of people of other races.
33. I am not made acutely aware
that my shape, bearing, or body odor will be taken as a reflection on my race.
34. I can worry about racism
without being seen as self-interested or self-seeking.
35. I can take a job with an affirmative action employer
without having my co-workers on the job suspect that I got it because of my race.
36. If my day, week, or year is going badly, I
need not ask of each negative episode or situation whether it has racial overtones.
37. I can be pretty sure of finding people who
would be willing to talk with me and advise me about my next steps,
professionally.
38. I can think over many options, social,
political, imaginative, or professional, without asking whether a person of my
race would be accepted or allowed to do what I want to do.
39. I can be late to a meeting without having the
lateness reflect on my race.
40. I can choose public accommodation without
fearing that people of my race cannot get in or will be mistreated in the
places I have chosen.
41. 1 can be sure that if I need legal or medical
help, my race will not work against me.
42. I can arrange my activities so that I will
never have to experience feelings of rejection owing to my race.
43. If I have low credibility as a leader, I can
be sure that my race is not the problem.
44. I can easily find academic courses and
institutions that give attention only to people of my race.
45. I can expect figurative language and imagery in all
of the arts to testify to experiences of my race.
46. I can choose blemish cover or bandages in
“flesh” color and have them more or less match my skin.
I repeatedly forgot each of
the realizations on this list until I wrote it down. For me, white privilege has turned out to be
an elusive and fugitive subject. The pressure to avoid it is great, for in facing it I must give up the myth of
meritocracy. If these things are true, this is not such a free country; one’s
life is not what one makes it; many doors open for certain
people through no virtues of their own. These perceptions mean also that my
moral condition is not what I had been led to believe. The appearance of being
a good citizen rather than a troublemaker comes in large part from having all
sorts of doors open automatically because of my color.
A
further paralysis of nerve comes from literary silence protecting privilege.
My clearest memories of finding such analysis are in Lillian Smith’s
unparalleled Killers
of the Dream and Margaret Andersen’s review of Karen and Mamie
Fields’ Lemon
Swamp. Smith, for example, wrote about walking toward black children
on the street and knowing they would step into the gutter. Andersen contrasted
the pleasure that she, as a white child, took on summer driving trips to the
south with Karen Fields’ memories of driving in a closed car stocked with all
necessities lest, in stopping, her black family should suffer “insult, or
worse.” Adrienne Rich also recognizes and writes about daily experiences of privilege,
but in my observation, white women’s writing in this area is far more often on
systemic racism than on our daily lives as light-skinned women.2
2. Andersen, Margaret~ “Race and the Social
Science Curriculum: A Teaching and Learning Discussion.” Radical Teacher, November, 1984, pp. 17-20. Smith, Lillian, Killers
of the
Dream, New York W. W. Norton, 1949.
In unpacking this invisible
knapsack of white privilege, I have listed conditions of daily experience that
I once took for granted, as neutral, normal, and universally available to
everybody, just as I once thought of a male-focused curriculum as the neutral
or accurate account that can speak for all. Nor did I think of any of these
perquisites as bad for the holder. I now think that we need a more finely
differentiated taxonomy of privilege, for some of these varieties are only what
one would want for everyone in a just society, and others give license to be
ignorant, oblivious, arrogant, and destructive. Before proposing some more
finely tuned categorization, I will make some observations about the general
effects of these conditions on my life and expectations.
In this potpourri of
examples, some privileges make me feel at home in the world. Others allow me to escape
penalties or dangers that others suffer. Through some, I escape fear, anxiety,
insult, injury, or a sense of not being welcome, not being real. Some keep me
from having to hide, to be in disguise, to feel sick or crazy, to negotiate each
transaction from the position of being an outsider or, within my group, a
person who is suspected of having too close links with a dominant culture. Most
keep me from having to be angry.
I see a pattern running
through the matrix of white privilege, a pattern of assumptions that were
passed on to me as a white person. There was one main piece of cultural turf;
it was my own turf, and I was among those who could
control the turf. I could measure up to the cultural standards and take
advantage of the many options I saw around me to make what the culture would
call a success of my life. My skin color was
an asset for any move I was educated to want to make.
I could
think of myself as “belonging” in major ways and of making social systems work
for me. I could freely disparage, fear, neglect, or be oblivious to anything
outside of the dominant cultural forms. Being of the main culture, I could also
criticize it fairly freely. My life was
reflected back to me frequently enough so that I felt, with regard to my race,
if not to my sex, like one of the real people.
Whether through the
curriculum or in the newspaper, the television, the economic system, or the
general look of people in the streets, I received daily
signals and indications that
my people counted and that others either didn’t exist or must be trying, not very
successfully, to be like people of my race. I was given cultural permission not to hear
voices of people of other races or a tepid cultural tolerance for hearing or
acting on such voices. I was also raised not to suffer seriously from anything
that darker-skinned people might say about my group, “protected,” though
perhaps I should more accurately say prohibited, through the habits of my economic class and social
group, from living in racially mixed groups or being reflective about interactions
between people of differing races.
In proportion as my racial
group was being made confident, comfortable, and oblivious, other groups were
likely being made unconfident, uncomfortable, and alienated. Whiteness
protected me from many kinds of hostility, distress, and violence, which I was
being subtly trained to visit in turn upon people of color.
For this reason, the word
“privilege” now seems to me misleading. Its connotations are too positive to
fit the conditions and behaviors which “privilege systems” produce. We usually
think of privilege as being a favored state, whether earned, or conferred by
birth or luck. School graduates are reminded they are privileged and urged to
use their (enviable) assets well. The word “privilege” carries the connotation
of being something everyone must want. Yet some of the conditions I have
described here work to systemically overempower certain groups. Such privilege
simply confers dominance, gives permission to control, because of one’s race or sex. The kind of
privilege that gives license to some people to be, at best, thoughtless and, at
worst, murderous should not continue to be referred to as a desirable
attribute. Such “privilege” may be widely desired without being in any way
beneficial to the whole society.
Moreover, though “privilege”
may confer power, it
does not confer
moral strength. Those who do not depend on conferred dominance have traits and
qualities that may never develop in those who do. Just as Women’s Studies
courses indicate that women survive their political circumstances to lead lives
that hold the human race together, so “underprivileged” people of color who are
the world’s majority have survived their oppression and lived survivors’ lives
from which the white global minority can and must learn. In some groups, those
dominated have actually become strong through not having all of these unearned advantages, and
this gives them a great deal to teach the others. Members of so-called
privileged groups can seem foolish, ridiculous, infantile, or dangerous by
contrast.
I want, then,
to distinguish between earned strength and unearned power conferred
systemically. Power from unearned privilege can look like strength when it is, in fact, permission to
escape or to dominate. But not all of the privileges on my list are inevitably
damaging. Some, like the
expectation
that neighbors will be decent to you, or that your race will not count against
you in court, should be the norm in a just society and should be considered as
the entitlement of everyone. Others, like the privilege not to listen to less
powerful people, distort the humanity of the holders as well as the ignored
groups. Still others, like finding one’s staple foods everywhere, may be a
function of being a member of a numerical majority in the population. Others
have to do with not having to labor under pervasive negative stereotyping and
mythology.
We
might at least start by distinguishing between positive advantages that we can
work to spread, to the point where they are not advantages at all but simply
part of the normal civic and social fabric, and negative types of advantage
that unless rejected will always reinforce our present hierarchies. For
example, the positive “privilege” of belonging, the feeling that one belongs
within the human circle, as Native Americans say, fosters development and
should not be seen as privilege for a few. It is, let us say, an entitlement
that none of us should have to earn; ideally it is an unearned entitlement. At present, since only a few have it, it is
an unearned advantage for them. The negative
“privilege” that gave me cultural permission not to take darker-skinned Others
seriously can be seen as arbitrarily conferred dominance and should not be
desirable for anyone. This paper results from a process of coming to see that
some of the power that I originally saw as attendant on being a human being in
the United States consisted in unearned advantage and conferred
dominance, as
well as other kinds of special circumstance not universally taken for granted.
In writing this paper I have
also realized that white identity and status (as well as class identity and
status) give me considerable power to choose whether to broach
this subject and its trouble. I can pretty well
decide whether to disappear and avoid and not listen and escape the dislike I
may engender in other people through this essay, or interrupt, answer,
interpret, preach, correct, criticize, and control to some extent what goes on
in reaction to it.
Being white, I
am given considerable power to escape many kinds of danger or penalty as well
as to choose which risks I want to take.
There
is an analogy here, once again, with Women’s Studies. Our male colleagues do
not have a great deal to lose in supporting Women’s Studies, but they do not
have a great deal to lose if they oppose it either. They simply have the
power to decide whether to commit themselves to more equitable distributions of
power. They will probably feel few penalties whatever choice they make they do
not seem, in any obvious short-term sense, the ones at risk, though they and we
are all at risk because of the behaviors that have been rewarded in them.
Through Women’s Studies work
I have met very few men who are truly distressed about systemic, unearned male
advantage and conferred
dominance. And so one
question for me and others like me is whether we will be like them, or whether
we will get truly distressed, even outraged, about unearned race advantage and
conferred dominance and if so, what we will do to lessen them. In any case, we
need to do more work in identifying how they actually affect our daily lives.
We need more down-to-earth writing by people about these taboo subjects. We
need more understanding of the ways in which white “privilege” damages white
people, for these are not the same ways in which it damages the victimized. Skewed white psyches are an
inseparable part of the picture, though I do nor want to confuse the kinds of
damage done to the holders of special assets and to those who suffer the
deficits. Many, perhaps most, of our white students in the United States think
that racism doesn’t affect them because they are not people of color; they do
not see “whiteness” as a racial identity. Many men likewise think that Women’s
Studies does not bear on their own existences because they are not female; they
do not see themselves as having gendered identities. Insisting on the universal
“effects” of “privilege” systems, then, becomes one of our chief tasks, and
being more explicit about the particular effects in particular contexts is another. Men need
to join us in this work.
In addition, since race and
sex are not the only advantaging systems at work, we need to similarly examine
the daily experience of having age advantage, or ethnic advantage, or physical
ability, or advantage related to nationality, religion, or sexual orientation.
Professor Marnie Evans suggested to me that in many ways the list I made also
applies directly to heterosexual privilege. This is a still more taboo subject
than race privilege: the daily ways in which heterosexual privilege makes some
persons comfortable or powerful, providing supports, assets, approvals, and
rewards to those who live or expect to live in heterosexual pairs. Unpacking
that content is still more difficult, owing to the deeper imbeddedness of
heterosexual advantage and dominance and stricter taboos surrounding these.
But to start such an
analysis I would put this observation from my own experience: The fact that I
live under the same roof with a man triggers all kinds of societal assumptions
about my worth, politics, life, and values and triggers a host of unearned
advantages and powers. After recasting many elements from the original list I
would add further observations like these:
1. My children do not have to answer questions about why I live with my
partner (my husband).
2. I have no difficulty finding neighborhoods where people approve of
our household.
3. Our children are given texts and classes that implicitly support
our kind of family unit and do not turn them against my choice of domestic
partnership.
4. I can travel alone or with my husband without expecting
embarrassment or hostility in those who deal with us.
5. Most people I meet will see my marital arrangements
as an asset to my life or as a favorable comment on my likability, my
competence, or my mental health.
6. I can talk about the social events of a weekend without fearing
most listeners’ reactions.
7. I will feel welcomed and “normal” in the usual walks of public
life, institutional and social.
8. In many contexts, I am seen as “all right” in daily work on women because I do not live chiefly with women.
Difficulties and dangers
surrounding the task of finding parallels are many. Since racism, sexism, and
heterosexism are not the same, the advantages associated with them
should not be seen as the same. In addition, it is hard to isolate aspects of unearned advantage
that derive chiefly from social class, economic class, race, religion, region,
sex, or ethnic identity. The oppressions are both distinct and interlocking, as
the Combahee River Collective statement of 1977 continues to remind us
eloquently.3
One factor seems clear about
all of the interlocking oppressions. They take both active forms that we can
see and embedded forms that members of the dominant group are taught nor to
see. In my class and place, I did not see myself as racist because I was taught
to recognize racism only in individual acts of meanness by members of my group,
never in invisible systems conferring racial dominance on my group from birth.
Likewise, we are taught to think that sexism or heterosexism is carried on only
through intentional, individual acts of discrimination, meanness, or cruelty,
rather than in invisible systems conferring unsought dominance on certain groups.
Disapproving of the systems won’t be enough to change them. I was taught to
think that racism could end if white individuals changed their attitudes; many
men think sexism can be ended by individual changes in daily behavior toward
women. But a man’s sex provides advantage for him whether or not he approves of
the way in which dominance has been conferred on his group. A “white” skin in
the United Stares opens many doors for whites whether or nor we approve of the
way dominance has been conferred on us. Individual acts can palliate, but
cannot end, these problems.
3. ~A Black Feminist
Statement,” The Combahee River Collective, pp. 13-22
in G. Hull, P.
Scott,B. Smith, Eds., All the Women Are
White, All the Blacks Are Men, But Some of Us Are Brave: Black WomenStudies Old Westbury, NY: The Feminist Press, 1982.
·
To
redesign social systems, we need first to acknowledge their colossal unseen
dimensions. The silences and denials surrounding privilege are the key
political tool here. They keep the thinking about equality or equity
incomplete, protecting unearned advantage and conferred dominance by making
these taboo subjects. Most talk by whites about equal opportunity seems to me
now to be about equal opportunity to try to get into a position of dominance
while denying that systems of
dominance exist.
Obliviousness
about white advantage, like obliviousness about male advantage, is kept
strongly inculturated in the United States so as to maintain the myth of
meritocracy, the myth that democratic choice is equally available to all. Keeping most people
unaware that freedom of confident action is there for just a small number of
people props up those in power and serves to keep power in the hands of the
same groups that have most of it already. Though systemic change takes many decades, there are pressing
questions for me and I imagine for some others like me if we raise our daily
consciousness on the perquisites of being light-skinned. What will we do with
such knowledge? As we know from watching men, it is an open question whether we will choose to use
unearned advantage to weaken invisible privilege systems and whether we will
use any of our arbitrarily awarded power to try to reconstruct power systems on
a broader base.