sqbr: pretty purple pi (existentialism)
Sean ([personal profile] sqbr) wrote2008-04-30 07:10 am
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Highlights from ibarw roundup post

Someone on [livejournal.com profile] debunkingwhite posted a link to these race related resources from ibarw, which has a BUNCH of really interesting essays, many of them on topics I'm interested in.

But I'm actually a little burnt out about talking about race etc for a little while (Complex concepts! Brain hurty!) so go read these yourselves :)



Something I would like to get a better grip on, and haven't seen discussed anywhere very well, is how to deal not with, say, white feminists vs non-white feminists (the power differential there is at least pretty straight forward) but, say white feminists dealing/conflicting with non-white men. Or gay men, or transexuals. Or white non-english speaking non-americans vs non-white english speaking americans. I think the ideas about intersectionality I linked to above are a good place to start, though. Acknowledging everyone's experiences and not trying to create a linear hierarchy of oppression. I think aknowledging people's experiences is important even when the power differential is really straightforward: even straight white men can have deeply traumatising experiences to do with race/gender etc, and it's important not to dismiss individual experience even as you emphasise that individuals privileged place in an overall unjust society *insert thinky essay here :)*
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[identity profile] shrydar.livejournal.com 2008-04-30 01:42 am (UTC)(link)
"Where are all the bloggers of color?

This question makes the rounds in blogland oh, every three or four months. Invariably, a white blogger is the one doing the asking and a whole slew of white folks are speculating about the answer."


If I had a dollar for every time I've heard a 20something white male game developer ask "Where are all the female gamers"... always ignoring that their little niche of first-person-shooters is now (by sales) a minority genre, and that actually Women Do Play...
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[personal profile] alias_sqbr 2008-04-30 02:38 am (UTC)(link)
Yes, that's a very comparable situation. And of course the term "gamer" just happens to be associated with the sorts of games men tend to like...