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NEWSLETTER

Friday 26 January 2018

Being Made to "See"

Ok, a young white girl talking about race.



Accessed via https://www.hercampus.com/school/portland/colorblindness-contributes-racism

Things are about to get interesting...

So recently it's come to my attention how more and more people are promoting a "colour-blind" approach to...well...life. Like, my Facebook newsfeed is full of mum's posting how "my baby doesn't see colour," and people declaring that they "just don't register race" and - my personal favourite - how "we're all the same race really. You know. The Human Race." 

And my god it's pissing me off.

Immediately, I'm going to state my privilege. I'm a white young woman. I grew up in a very white town. My entire life, I've been provided with sense of security - be it economic, social, educational, whatever. Even if I've ignored it, it's always been available. And I'll admit, I was not always aware of the ways in which I was privileged and at a certain point, I would have argued that I was not.
You see, when you’re young and light-skinned, trapped in a town full of people just like you, you grow up naïve. Doors inevitably open up for you and due to the ease with which I could move through certain spaces, I assumed the same opportunities afforded to me were the same ones afforded to everyone else.

Of course, I was wrong. 

I'm interested in discussing race because everyone I know who is white and liberal is scared to do so. It dawned on me that the reason we don’t talk to each other about race is because it’s a minefield to which no one has the manual. We have an avoidance issue on our hands! We're a nation avoiding the elephant in the room. We don't like to bring up issues of race because, basically, no-one wants to be labelled a racist. Yes, it's uncomfortable. Yeah, sometimes it's hard to talk about. But not talking about it is a problem. More specifically, it's a problem to do with white privilege.

It's the statements I have quoted above which pretty much epitomise the status of white privilege in the form of colour-blindness. Stating that you don't "see" race, that you don't "register" it means you can't possibly be racist, right?

Erm no.

When you don't "see" race, you're ignoring race. And that itself is racist. BEING COLOUR-BLIND DOES NOT MAKE YOU OPEN MINDED OR ACCEPTING (apologies for the capitals; they were initially a mistype!) It's a popular ideology – like a racial utopic version of the Golden Rule – but, yeah, sorry to burst your bubble, but it's actually quite racist. 

You don't register race? You don't see it? Then you aren't acknowledging the very real ways in which racism has existed and continues to exist, both in individuals and systemically. By professing not to see race, you’re just ignoring racism, not solving it. It's a way for white people to subtly brush issues of race under the rug in an attempt to unburden themselves. Colour-blindness allows white people to point to racial advancements like school integration and affirmative action (seen as heavily positive intervention in the West) as proof that racism itself is obsolete, while completely ignoring the role that institutional racism plays in determining access to good quality education and career outcomes. It lets white people pretend that racism isn't the urgent problem it once was. 

And I'm calling bullshit. 

We don't live in a "post-racial" society, period. Not whilst racism is so thoroughly engrained in our social structures and institutions. By claiming that you don't acknowledge race, you are foisting your whiteness on everyone as a default standard of sameness. You are negating the experiences of anyone who is not white, thereby supressing critically important narratives of oppression. Once you view everyone through a colour-blind (white) lens, you deny the realities faced by non-white people and fail to recognise any injustice. 

Of course, race isn't the only factor that defines people. There's gender, sexuality, religion, ability: all of these contribute to discussions of identity politics. So why do the white people I encounter not like to talk about race? Why do they claim to be colour-blind? Because promoting colour-blindness is easy. It eliminates the need to recognise and discuss extremely uncomfortable realities. 

However, I think it's time for the naïve white people in my life to realise that by claiming not to "see" colour, you are stripping people of a fundamental aspect of their identity. So I want to encourage them to be brave. Have the tough conversations. Acknowledging race doesn't make you racist. Pretending it doesn't exist, however, is a different story!


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Tuesday 23 January 2018

Budapest: August/September 2017

Buda-SESH (innit)










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Tuesday 9 January 2018

The Brightest Blackout


Fashion and feminism? Well, we all knew I'd pipe up at some point!




Cynical opinions of 'Hollywood Fakery' and lazy protesting aside, I think it's fair to say that the 2018 Golden Globes was less of a fashion show, and more of a show of power. A tidal wave of 'Time's Up' pins washed across the red carpet in a sea of black - arguably the brightest blackout (literally) the gender equality movement has been splashed with so far.

It wasn't so much a question of "who are you wearing?" but more of a "who do you stand with?" It was less a competition of glamour and more of a stance of solidarity.

Perhaps Hollywood has done more in one night than Washington has done in a year, simply because it's reaching a new demographic, a new audience. The story of the past year, beginning with an inaugural speech of darker bile and greater bunk than any in my lifetime, has been the abdication and outsourcing of the moral authority that the presidency of the United States once had. And Hollywood, of all places, has picked up on it.

Actions speak louder than words and whilst this was by no means a silent protest, the visual power of red carpet photography means that this multimedia protest will reach new levels of communicating powerful values and ideals. In an anxious moment of absent (I feel the term “shit” doesn’t quite cover its full extent) leadership, Hollywood is now articulating the sorts of values that the bitter rich white men holding the reins of government won't do.

Both men and women talked diversity and gender equality. They put "hope" in our vocabulary. And while these topics aren't exactly new to discussions, there has never been such a urgently resounding answer to the silence of the White House.

By no means is Hollywood perfect - time and time again its proven to be anything but. However, what it did prove is that there is "a tomorrow of hope" (YES OPRAH, YES QUEEN!) Photographers didn't capture this season's hottest shoes, or what we'll all be wearing in Spring; rather they captured the paradoxical state of the USA entirely. It's upside down, inside out, back to front, from whichever angle you look at it from. There’s make-believe in the home of politics. There’s politics in the home of make-believe.

'Time's Up', Trump: better think quick.


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Verona: May 2017

"There is no world for me outside Verona's walls..." Romeo and Juliet (3.3)


























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Boston: April 2017

The city I fell in love with...#REDSOX
































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