More thoughts on the privilege meme
Jan. 7th, 2008 09:52 pmI finally worked out my real problem with that meme. I grew up poor enough that I only scored a 4, and yeah, I wasn't living the middle class life compared to what I saw on TV, I was still privileged compared to many, many of the other poor people around me. We were poor, but not so fucking life draining, hungry, always worried about money poor, so i knew I was privileged. The list thing starting from a more middle class base caused some mental disconnects for me, because I feel like I've always been aware that if you're not starving, there is always someone in America who has it worse off, and that list was coming from a place without even that assumption.
OTOH, It's started a LOT of really solid conversations about class and privilege, and has people thinking, so hell yeah!
OTOH, It's started a LOT of really solid conversations about class and privilege, and has people thinking, so hell yeah!
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Date: 2008-01-08 06:25 am (UTC)Really, before my dad died and my mom abandonded us, we had no idea what we were missing. Then we moved in with my grandparents, who willingly bought food and paid the utility bill, then we began to realize just how bad we off we were.
Before that, though, ignorance really was bliss.
...playing just for the privileged...;)
Date: 2008-01-08 02:43 pm (UTC)So, to that end it's useful - just as it has prompted a lot of people around here to think about privilege who otherwise don't really think about it.
My mother made damn sure that I knew how well I had it growing up - especially since it wasn't always that way for her family. But I can definitely tell you that for many many people who can check a bunch of those boxes, they have never considered themselved privileged in the slightest, because just as there's always someone worse off, there's always someone with more.
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Date: 2008-01-08 05:00 pm (UTC)So the meme can't tell us whether anyone is privileged. But the questions themselves can be useful. I think they have the most use to people who are both very privileged, in myriad ways, and are also sort of clueless. For folks like us, I think it's valuable for people to understand that you could be privileged in some ways and not privileged in others; that if you had educational privileges they mattered, gave you a leg up over folks without educational privileges, even if there were other things you lacked. NOT to say anyone didn't deserve or should feel guilty, but to understand the impact NOT having that given privilege might have had on your life, so we can see why making sure everyone has a decent education is important.
I guess the problem I had with a lot of the criticisms of the meme (not yours, actually, my post earlier wasn't referring to you) was that people really have been talking about privilege as if it's an either/or thing, and since the meme couldn't determine that, then the questions are useless. Well, it's not an either/or thing. I grew up very working class, and as an adult with a young family, we were POOR. But I had social privilege. I'm white. I'm literate. I've almost always had health care. And, I'm sorry, but if a person who had a great education (even via scholarship), has a kind of privilege, whether he was poor or not. It's good to get people to recognize their privileges. You and I have apparently recognized our privileges our whole lives, but when you lack a lot you're more exposed to people that lack even more, I think. So many people do not understand how rare their educational privileges are. For those people, in a classroom setting in a university (as part of a whole class that explores other kinds of privilege as well), I think those people might be surprised at the results of that exercise, and that would be a good thing.
Oooh. That got long. Sorry!!!