PAULA S . ROTHENBE RG
TENTH EDITION
A N I N T E G R A T E D S T U D Y
RACE, CLASS, AND GENDER IN THE UNITED STATES
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RACE, CLASS, AND GENDER IN THE UNITED STATES, Tenth Edition Paula S. Rothenberg This best-selling anthology expertly explores concepts of identity, diversity, and inequality as it introduces students to race, class, gender, and sexuality in the United States. The thoroughly updated Tenth Edition features 38 new readings. New mate- rial explores citizenship and immigration, mass incarceration, sex crimes on campus, transgender identity, the school-to-prison pipeline, food insecurity, the Black Lives Matter movement, the pathology of poverty, socioeconomic privilege versus racial privilege, pollution on tribal lands, stereotype threat, gentrification, and more. The combination of thoughtfully selected readings, deftly written introductions, and careful organization makes Race, Class, and Gender in the United States, Tenth Edition, the most engaging and balanced presentation of these issues available today.
Readings new to the Tenth Edition include:
• The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander • How Does It Feel to Be a Problem? Being Young and Arab in America by
Moustafa Bayoumi • Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates • Obergefell v. Hodges, the Supreme Court case that legalized gay marriage
• Immigration Enforcement as a Race-Making Institution by Douglas S. Massey • Domestic Workers Bill of Rights by Ai-jen Poo • The New Face of Hunger by Tracie McMillan • My Class Didn’t Trump My Race by Robin DiAngelo • Intersectionality: An Everyday Metaphor Anyone Can Use, Kimberlé Crenshaw
interviewed by Bim Adewunmi • Black Ethnics: Race, Immigration, and the Pursuit of the American Dream by
Christina Greer • Transgender Feminism: Queering the Woman Question by Susan Stryker • Debunking the Pathology of Poverty by Susan Greenbaum • The Transgender Crucible, reporting on the life and imprisonment of
transgender activist CeCe McDonald, by Sabrina Rubin Erdely • Neither Black nor White, on the racialization of Asian Americans, by
Angelo Ancheta
• “You are in the dark, in the car…” from Citizen: An American Lyric by Claudia Rankine
• When You Forget to Whistle Vivaldi by Tressie McMillan Cottom
Instructor’s resources to accompany Race, Class, and Gender in the United States, Tenth Edition, are available for download. Instructor’s resources include Reading for Comprehension Questions, Writing Assignments, Article Summaries, Research Proj- ects, Recommended Media, and Data Activities.
6 × 9.25 SPINE: 0.8125 FLAPS: 0
www.macmillanlearning.com Cover photo: Silberkorn/Shutterstock
RACE, CLASS, AND GENDER IN THE UNITED STATES
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New York
RACE, CLASS, AND GENDER IN THE UNITED STATES AN INTEGRATED STUDY
Tenth Edition
Paula S. Rothenberg
with Soniya Munshi Borough of Manhattan
Community College
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Publisher, Psychology and Sociology: Rachel Losh Associate Publisher: Jessica Bayne Senior Associate Editor: Sarah Berger Development Editor: Thomas Finn Assistant Editor: Kimberly Morgan Smith Executive Marketing Manager: Katherine Nurre Media Producer: Hanna Squire Director, Content Management Enhancement: Tracey Kuehn Managing Editor, Sciences and Social Sciences: Lisa Kinne Senior Project Editor: Kerry O’Shaughnessy Photo Editor: Robin Fadool Permissions Associate: Chelsea Roden Director of Design, Content Management: Diana Blume Senior Design Manager: Vicki Tomaselli Cover and Interior Design: Kevin Kall Senior Production Supervisor: Stacey B. Alexander Composition: Jouve North America Printing and Binding: RR Donnelley Cover Photo: Silberkorn/Shutterstock
Library of Congress Control Number: 2016932674
ISBN- 13: 978-1-4641-7866-5 ISBN- 10: 1-4641-7866-6
© 2016, 2014, 2010, 2007 by Worth Publishers
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
First printing
Worth Publishers One New York Plaza Suite 4500 New York, NY 10004-1562 www.worthpublishers.com
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http://www.worthpublishers.com
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Preface xiii
About the Author xix
Introduction 1
PART I The Social Construction of Difference: Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality 5
1 Racial Formations Michael Omi and Howard Winant 11
2 Constructing Race, Creating White Privilege Pem Davidson Buck 21
3 How Jews Became White Folks: And What That Says About Race in America Karen Brodkin 27
4 “Night to His Day”: The Social Construction of Gender Judith Lorber 38
5 The Invention of Heterosexuality Jonathan Ned Katz 47
6 Masculinity as Homophobia: Fear, Shame and Silence in the Construction of Gender Identity Michael S. Kimmel 59
7 Transgender Feminism: Queering the Woman Question Susan Stryker 71
8 Debunking the Pathology of Poverty Susan Greenbaum 78
9 Disability and the Justification of Inequality in American History Douglas C. Baynton 81
10 Domination and Subordination Jean Baker Miller 91
Suggestions for Further Reading 97
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CONTENTS
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PART I I Understanding Racism, Sexism, Heterosexism, and Class Privilege 99
1 Defining Racism: “Can We Talk?” Beverly Daniel Tatum 105
2 Color- Blind Racism Eduardo Bonilla- Silva 113
3 Neither Black nor White Angelo N. Ancheta 120
4 Oppression Marilyn Frye 130
5 Homophobia as a Weapon of Sexism Suzanne Pharr 134
6 Class in America Gregory Mantsios 144
7 Unequal Childhoods: Class, Race, and Family Life Annette Lareau 163
8 Intersectionality: An Everyday Metaphor Anyone Can Use Kimberlé Crenshaw, interviewed by Bim Adewunmi 171
9 White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack Peggy McIntosh 176
10 My Class Didn’t Trump My Race: Using Oppression to Face Privilege Robin J. DiAngelo 181
Suggestions for Further Reading 188
PART III Complicating Questions of Identity: Race, Ethnicity, and Immigration 191
1 Immigration in the United States: New Economic, Social, Political Landscapes with Legislative Reform on the Horizon Faye Hipsman and Doris Meissner 195
2 Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of America Mae Ngai 207
3 Los Intersticios: Recasting Moving Selves Evelyn Alsultany 218
4 For Many Latinos, Racial Identity Is More Culture than Color Mireya Navarro 220
5 Black Ethnics: Race, Immigration, and the Pursuit of the American Dream Christina M. Greer 224
6 The Myth of the Model Minority Noy Thrupkaew 230
7 How Does It Feel to Be a Problem? Moustafa Bayoumi 237
Suggestions for Further Reading 242
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PART IV Discrimination in Everyday Life 243
1 The Problem: Discrimination U.S. Commission on Civil Rights 247
2 The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness Michelle Alexander 258
3 Deportations Are Down, But Fear Persists Among Undocumented Immigrants Tim Henderson 266
4 The Ghosts of Stonewall: Policing Gender, Policing Sex Joey L. Mogul, Andrea J. Ritchie, and Kay Whitlak 270
5 The Transgender Crucible Sabrina Rubin Erdely 276
6 Where “English Only” Falls Short Stacy A. Teicher 285
7 My Black Skin Makes My White Coat Vanish Mana Lumumba- Kasongo 288
8 Women in the State Police: Trouble in the Ranks Jonathan Schuppe 290
9 Muslim- American Running Back Off the Team at New Mexico State Matthew Rothschild 294
10 Race, Disability, and the School- to- Prison Pipeline Julianne Hing 296
11 The Segregated Classrooms of a Proudly Diverse School Jeffrey Gettleman 304
12 Race and Family Income of Students Influence Guidance Counselor’s Advice, Study Finds Eric Hoover 307
13 By the Numbers: Sex Crimes on Campus Dave Gustafson 308
14 More Blacks Live with Pollution The Associated Press 313
15 Pollution, Poverty and People of Color: A Michigan Tribe Battles a Global Corporation Brian Bienkowski 316
16 Testimony Sonny Singh 322
Suggestions for Further Reading 325
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PART V The Economics of Race, Class, and Gender 327
1 Imagine a Country Holly Sklar 329
2 Wealth Inequality Has Widened Along Racial, Ethnic Lines Since End of Great Recession Rakesh Kochhar and Richard Fry 340
3 The Making of the American 99% and the Collapse of the Middle Class Barbara Ehrenreich and John Ehrenreich 344
4 Immigration Enforcement as a Race- Making Institution Douglas S. Massey 348
5 For Asian Americans, Wealth Stereotypes Don’t Fit Reality Seth Freed Wessler 361
6 Gender and the Black Jobs Crisis Linda Burnham 364
7 Domestic Workers Bill of Rights: A Feminist Approach for a New Economy Ai- jen Poo 373
8 “Savage Inequalities” Revisited Bob Feldman 378
9 The New Face of Hunger Tracie McMillan 382
10 “I am Alena”: Life as a Trans Woman Where Survival Means Living as Christopher Ed Pilkington 387
11 Cause of Death: Inequality Alejandro Reuss 393
12 Inequality Undermines Democracy Eduardo Porter 398
Suggestions for Further Reading 401
PART VI Many Voices, Many Lives: Issues of Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality in Everyday Life 403
1 Civilize Them with a Stick Mary Brave Bird (Crow Dog) with Richard Erdoes 407
2 Then Came the War Yuri Kochiyama 411
3 Crossing the Border Without Losing Your Past Oscar Casares 419
4 Between the World and Me Ta- Nehisi Coates 421
5 “I wouldn’t have come if I’d known.” E. Tammy Kim 425
6 This Person Doesn’t Sound White Ziba Kashef 428
7 “You are in the dark, in the car . . .” Claudia Rankine 432
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8 He Defies You Still: The Memoirs of a Sissy Tommi Avicolli 434
9 Against “Bullying” or On Loving Queer Kids Richard Kim 440
10 The Case of Sharon Kowalski and Karen Thompson: Ableism, Heterosexism, and Sexism Joan L. Griscom 443
11 Gentrification Will Drive My Uncle Out of His Neighborhood, and I Will Have Helped Eric Rodriguez 451
12 My Vassar College Faculty ID Makes Everything OK Kiese Laymon 453
13 The Unbearable (In)visibility of Being Trans Chase Strangio 460
14 Black Bodies in Motion and in Pain Edwidge Danticat 463
Suggestions for Further Reading 466
PART VII How It Happened: Race and Gender Issues in U.S. Law 469
1 Indian Tribes: A Continuing Quest for Survival U.S. Commission on Human Rights 477
2 An Act for the Better Ordering and Governing of Negroes and Slaves, South Carolina, 1712 482
3 The “ Three- Fifths Compromise” The U.S. Constitution, Article 1, Section 2 487
4 An Act Prohibiting the Teaching of Slaves to Read 488
5 Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions, Seneca Falls Convention, 1848 489
6 People v. Hall, 1854 493
7 Dred Scott v. Sandford, 1857 495
8 The Emancipation Proclamation Abraham Lincoln 499
9 United States Constitution: Thirteenth (1865), Fourteenth (1868), and Fifteenth (1870) Amendments 501
10 The Black Codes W. E. B. Du Bois 503
11 The Chinese Exclusion Act 511
12 Elk v. Wilkins, 1884 514
13 Plessy v. Ferguson, 1896 516
14 United States Constitution: Nineteenth Amendment (1920) 519
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15 U.S. v. Bhagat Singh Thind, 1923 520
16 Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, 1954 523
17 Roe v. Wade, 1973 528
18 The Equal Rights Amendment (Defeated) 529
19 Obergefell v. Hodges, 2015 530
Suggestions for Further Reading 534
PART VIII Maintaining Race, Class, and Gender Hierarchies: Reproducing “Reality” 537
1 Self- Fulfilling Stereotypes Mark Snyder 541
2 Am I Thin Enough Yet? Sharlene Hesse- Biber 547
3 Institutions and Ideologies Michael Parenti 555
4 Media Magic: Making Class Invisible Gregory Mantsios 562
5 Still Separate, Still Unequal: America’s Educational Apartheid Jonathan Kozol 570
6 Masked Racism: Reflections on the Prison Industrial Complex Angela Davis 584
7 You May Know Me from Such Roles as Terrorist #4 Jon Ronson 589
8 The Florida State Seminoles: The Champions of Racist Mascots Dave Zirin 596
9 Michael Brown’s Unremarkable Humanity Ta- Nehisi Coates 599
10 When You Forget to Whistle Vivaldi Tressie McMillan Cottom 601
Suggestions for Further Reading 603
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PART IX Social Change: Revisioning the Future and Making a Difference 605
1 Age, Race, Class, and Sex: Women Redefining Difference Audre Lorde 609
2 Feminism: A Transformational Politic bell hooks 616
3 A New Vision of Masculinity Cooper Thompson 623
4 Interrupting the Cycle of Oppression: The Role of Allies as Agents of Change Andrea Ayvazian 629
5 Demand the Impossible Matthew Rothschild 636
6 The Motivating Forces Behind Black Lives Matter Tasbeeh Herwees 639
7 On Solidarity, “Centering Anti- Blackness,” and Asian Americans Scot Nakagawa 642
Suggestions for Further Reading 644
Index 645
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Reflections from the First to the Tenth Edition of Race, Class, and Gender When the first edition of Race, Class, and Gender in the United States was published in 1988 under the title Racism and Sexism: An Integrated Study, there was no World Wide Web. There were no smart phones. Smoking was still allowed on airplanes. China was one of the poorest nations in the world, the Soviet Union still existed, and apartheid was alive— if not well— in South Africa. In fact, the next president of South Africa and famed civil rights leader Nelson Mandela was still in prison in 1988, serving the 25th year of his sentence.
In the United States, the Reagan Administration was defending the secret sale of U.S. arms to Iran, while the Supreme Court was asked to decide whether one of the largest associations of “businessmen”—the Rotary Club— had a constitutional right to refuse to admit women as members. Scholars were arguing over the relationship between race and intelligence— a debate that was about to get even more heated in the decade that followed. Three quarters of the American population thought homo- sexual relations between two consenting adults was always wrong and the state had the right to outlaw such conduct.* As for the issue of economic inequality, it was nowhere to be found in the public discourse.
Much has happened in the intervening years. With a surge in voter turnout in 2008, a black man was elected president, and as of this writing, a woman is leading the polls for— and, by the time you are reading this, may even have won— the presidency of the United States. Given the setbacks for the feminist, black, and Latino/a move- ments of the 1960s and 1970s, most Americans in the 1980s did not expect to witness this type of cultural and political change in their lifetime. Even more inconceivable, given the cultural landscape, was that a growing LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender) movement would help make gay marriage legal, and gender reassignment would enter the popular culture. An Occupy Wall Street movement helped put the issue of economic inequality squarely on the national and international agenda, seem- ingly overnight. And while many had hoped for a growing environmental movement, few anticipated the emergence of a global approach to climate change.
On the other hand, nearly three decades after the first edition of this book was published, so much has stayed the same or worsened. In 1988, the richest 20% of Americans held 83% of total household wealth: today, that 20% holds 93% of the nation’s wealth. Women have made significant strides politically, socially, and eco- nomically, yet they still make only 77 cents for every dollar a man makes— and the
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PREFACE
* Smith, Tom W. “Public Attitudes toward Homosexuality.” NORC/University of Chicago: Septem- ber, 2011.
The right of states to outlaw acts of homosexuality by consenting adults was based on the 1986 Supreme Court decision Bowers v. Hardwick.
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gap is even greater for women of color (64 cents for African American women). While racial profiling has finally caught the attention of the media, its persistence—and its expansion to Muslim and Sikh communities—continues to destroy lives and families. Policies, like affirmative action, that were designed to remedy inequities have been deeply weakened. So too, have organizations, like unions, that had for so long been such an important check on inequality and injustice. Twenty- two percent of the chil- dren in the United States live in poverty, a proportion nearly identical to what it was 30 years ago. How ironic that so much change can co- exist with so much stagnation.
How do we make sense of all of this? In the introduction to the first edition of the book, I put it simply: “An integrated approach to the study of racism and sexism within the context of class provides us with a more comprehensive, more accurate, more useful analysis of the world in which we live out our lives.” This is as true now as it was nearly three decades ago.
New to Race, Class, and Gender, Tenth Edition The tenth edition of Race, Class, and Gender, like previous editions, views the prob- lems facing our country and our communities as structural, and seeks to contribute to the conversation about fairness and justice. Like its predecessors, this edition un- dertakes the study of race, gender, and sexuality within the context of class. We look at racism, sexism, heterosexism, class privilege, and the concepts of patriarchy and white privilege, and explore the interlocking nature of these systems of oppression as they work in combination and impact virtually every aspect of life in U.S. society today. New to Part II of this edition, we revisit Kimberlé Crenshaw’s work on inter- sectionality, a term she coined in 1989. In an interview, Crenshaw reflects on the continued need for an accessible metaphor that captures the complexity of multiple and simultaneous forms of oppression. This intersectional framework is one that we rely on throughout the book to illustrate the complex dimensions of race, gender, sexuality, and class.
Part I introduces these different categories by examining the ways each of them has been socially and hierarchically constructed to the benefit of some and to the disadvantage of others. Susan Stryker’s work, new to this edition, explores the rela- tionship between sex, gender, and gender identity. This excerpt lays a foundation for later pieces that address trans lives, identities, and experiences, all showing us how gender identity is shaped by race, class, sexuality, and other factors. For example, ad- ditional writings include a piece on violence against trans women (“The Transgender Crucible” by Sabrina Rubin Erdely in Part IV), the role of economic access in living as a trans person (“‘I am Alena’: Life as a Trans Woman Where Survival Means Living as Christopher” by Ed Pilkington in Part V), and a reflection on how recent public attention on trans communities is mediated by privilege so that many stories and experiences continue to be omitted (“The Unbearable (In)visibility of Being Trans” by Chase Strangio in Part VI).
This edition includes an intentional, focused, and intersectional engagement with current public conversations about mass incarceration, police violence, and racial and
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other forms of profiling. We have included an excerpt from Michelle Alexander’s The New Jim Crow (Part IV), which addresses mass incarceration and racial targeting of Black and Latino communities. “The Ghosts of Stonewall: Policing Sex, Policing Gender” by Joey L. Mogul, Andrea J. Ritchie, and Kay Whitlock and the above- mentioned “Trans- gender Crucible” both discuss how the actions and identities of LGBT people, especially people of color, come under greater scrutiny by the law and are more vulnerable to pun- ishment. Julianne Hing’s article, “Race, Disability and the School- to- Prison Pipeline,” illustrates the relationship between educational institutions, systems of punishment, and the risks involved for marginalized students.
In Part VI, “Many Voices, Many Lives,” Claudia Rankine, Ta- Nehisi Coates, and Kiese Laymon each offer a poetic reflection on how structural racism, specifically anti- black racism, operate on a deeply personal, everyday level of experience. Also in this part, Edwidge Dandicat shares a beautiful and difficult meditation on the concurrences of anti- black racism by linking the white supremacist killings of black churchgoers in Charleston, South Carolina, to the state policies of the removal of Hai- tians in the Dominican Republic. Finally, in Part VIII’s exploration of the role of the media and stereotypes in maintaining race, class, and gender hierarchies, Ta- Nehisi Coates and Tressie McMillan Cottom each reflect on the police killings of two un- armed black men, Michael Brown and Jonathan Ferrell. Coates and Cottom challenge “respectability politics,” or the idea that it is the responsibility of those individuals and groups that are being racially targeted to change their behavior to prevent such targeting. Coates and Cottom are concerned with how safety and protection from violence are distributed in our society and argue that one’s basic humanity is not something that must be earned. In our final part, Part IX, we include a selection by Tasbeeh Herwees about the founders of the Black Lives Matter movement. Herwees explores how gender and sexuality are integral to social justice organizing, even when it is explicitly centered on race.
As in previous editions, we pay substantive attention to the complex and evolv- ing dynamics of identity. For example, we feature Christina Greer’s research on the relationship between native- born black Americans and black ethnic immigrants, il- luminating the heterogeneity within black communities. We also include Angelo N. Ancheta’s seminal essay “Neither Black nor White” in Part II, which illustrates how Asians have been racially positioned in the United States. Scot Nakagawa’s “On Soli- darity, ‘Centering Anti- Blackness’ and Asian Americans” in Part IX brings Ancheta’s analysis into the present, reflects on how Asian Americans are racially positioned today, and offers suggestions for how Asian Americans should participate in contem- porary racial justice struggles.
This edition includes several pieces about the experiences of communities that are, or are perceived to be, Arab and/or Muslim. Moustafa Bayoumi’s work with Arab- and Muslim-American youth in the post- 9/11 period illustrates how contemporary examples of the racialization and exclusion of Arab and Muslim Americans reflects a history of these processes in the United States. Jon Ronson’s work (Part VIII) looks at stereotypical representations of terrorists in the media and how typecasting limits the opportunities available for Muslim- American actors.
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Additionally, this edition includes two new pieces that address the racial- ized experience of indigenous populations in the United States. In Part IV, Brian Bienkowski documents how environmental racism affects Native American popu- lations in Michigan, and in Part VIII, David Zirin examines how cultural racism is enacted against indigenous communities through professional sports team mascots.
Several essays in this new edition take a look at immigration policies. Faye Hipsman and Doris Meissner (Part III) provide a helpful overview of how the U.S. immigra- tion system works, its historical context, and contemporary trends in immigration. Tim Henderson’s piece (Part IV) looks at the fear of deportation in undocumented communities. In his article, Henderson notes that even when the rate of deportation went down, the level of fear in undocumented immigrant communities remained. He shows our feelings of fear and insecurity operate beyond the concrete risks we face. At the time of this writing, in early 2016, the Obama administration has prioritized a new wave of removal operations, conducting raids of mostly Central American individuals and families, making Henderson’s work even more poignant. Douglas Massey’s work (“Immigration Enforcement as a Race- Making Institution” in Part V) shows how immigration policy shapes the demographics of communities in the United States— in this case, Latino immigrants. Moving from the structural to the individual, E. Tammy Kim’s writing (Part VI) tells the story of an undocumented im- migrant and the everyday struggles she faces.
This edition includes many new pieces that approach issues of class and the econ- omy from an intersectional perspective. In Part I, we include a short essay by Susan Greenbaum that challenges the persistent myth that poor people are to blame for their economic conditions, by looking at government, corporate, and other struc- tural factors that shape poverty. In the next part, Robin DiAngelo provides a personal reflection on how her experience of poverty and class oppression did not negate her white privilege. In Part V, Rakesh Kochhar and Richard Fry offer an updated overview of inequality and wealth distribution by racial category. Seth Freed Wessler challenges stereotypes about Asian “model minority” success, painting a more com- plete picture of class distribution in Asian immigrant communities. Linda Burnham’s research shows how black women, facing both racism and sexism in the workplace, were more affected than others by the last recession and continue to struggle during the economic recovery. Ai-jen Poo writes about how domestic workers, organizing as a workforce of mostly immigrant women of color, challenge unfair and unjust workplace conditions. Organizing on the basis of “women’s work” makes visible the often- erased caring labor that is essential to our economy. Finally, Tracie McMillan writes about hunger in the United States, challenging assumptions about what the everyday experience of being without sufficient food looks like.
We close this edition with essays that encourage readers to redefine difference and to think in broad terms about the kind of society we wish to live in and the kinds of relationships we wish to have with others. These essays in Part IX, “Social Change: Revisioning the Future and Making a Difference,” by Audre Lorde, bell hooks, and Cooper Thompson, as well as the new pieces by Tasbeeh Herwees and Scot Nakagawa about the current movement for Black Lives, demonstrate how people who care about
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the issues of inequality, privilege, and injustice can, and are, making a difference in the world. Faculty using this book will find that this section allows them to end their courses in a very positive way. This is important because students who study social problems often end up feeling overwhelmed by the extent and severity of these issues. The articles in the last section leave students with an understanding that ordinary people acting on their principles really can make a difference!
Acknowledgments Many people contributed to Race, Class, and Gender— and its evolution over the course of nearly three decades. First, I owe a profound debt to the old 12th Street study group, with whom I first studied black history and first came to understand the centrality of the issue of race. I am also indebted to the group’s members, who pro- vided me with a lasting example of what it means to commit one’s life to the struggle for equality and justice for all people.
Next, I owe an equally profound debt to my friends and colleagues in the New Jersey Project on Inclusive Scholarship, Curriculum, and Teaching, and to friends, colleagues, and students at William Paterson University who have been involved in the various race and gender projects we have carried out over the years. I have learned a great deal from all of them. I would also like to thank the faculty and stu- dents, too many to name, at the many colleges and universities where I have lectured over the years.
In addition I am grateful to the reviewers of this and previous editions for their insightful feedback. They include: Mildred Anterior, New Jersey City University; Maral N. Attallah, Humboldt State University; Adriana Leela Bohm, Delaware Community College; Nancy F. Browning, Lincoln University of Missouri; Debra Butterfield, Boston College; Natalie Smith Carslon, North Dakota State Univer- sity; Margaret Crowdes, California State University– San Marcos; Helen Dedes, William Paterson University; Margie Kitter Edwards, Temple University; Miriam Rheingold Fuller, University of Central Missouri; Lawrence Andrew Gill, William Paterson University; Tonya Huber- Warring, St. Cloud State University; Denise Isom, California Polytechnic State University–San Luis Obispo; Kelly F. Jackson, Arizona State University; Navita Cummings James, University of South Florida; Michelle L. Johnson, Ramapo College of New Jersey; Mary Kelley, University of Central Missouri; Deborah L. Little, Adelphi University; Enid Logan, University of Minnesota; David Lucander, Rockland Community College; Michele Murphy, William Patterson University; Julie Norflus- Good, Ramapo College of New Jersey; Archana Pathak, Virginia Commonwealth University; Viji Sargis, William Paterson University; Rashad Shabazz, University of Vermont; Roger Simpson, California State University, Fresno; and Rebeckah Zincavage, Boston College.
This edition would not have been possible without the work of three collabora- tors to whom I am deeply indebted: Soniya Munshi for her research, writing, and revisions to this edition; Sarah Berger, my hands- on editor, for her insights, sensitivity,
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perseverance, and deep commitment to the project; and Greg Mantsios for his inval- uable assistance and good judgment about all things related to this and all previous editions.
Finally, I want to thank Greg for being such a remarkable partner as well as col- laborator; our children, Alexi Mantsios and Andrea Mantsios; and their partners, Caroline Donohue and Luis Armando Ocaranza Ordaz, for their insights, observa- tions, and most of all, their extraordinary support through thick and thin.
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Paula Rothenberg has been writing, teaching, and consulting on a variety of topics for over five decades. Her areas of expertise include multicultural curriculum transformation, issues of inequality, equity, and privilege, global- izing the curriculum, and white privilege. From 1989 to 2006, she served as Director of the New Jersey Project on Inclusive Scholarship, Curriculum, and Teaching, and Professor of Philosophy and Women’s Studies at The William Paterson University of New Jersey. She is the author of Invisible Privilege: A Memoir about Race, Class, and Gender (University Press of Kansas). Her anthology, White Privilege: Readings on the Other Side of Racism, is now in its fifth edition. Beyond Borders: Thinking Critically About Global Issues was published by Worth in 2005, and her anthology, What’s the Problem? A Brief Guide to Critical Thinking, was published in 2009. Paula Rothenberg is also co- editor of a number of other anthologies, including Creating an Inclusive College Curriculum: A Teaching Sourcebook from the New Jersey Project; Feminist Frameworks: Alternative Theoretical Accounts of the Relations be- tween Women and Men; and Philosophy Now. Her articles and essays ap- pear in journals and anthologies across the disciplines, and many have been widely reprinted.
About the Contributor Soniya Munshi is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the Borough of Man- hattan Community College of the City University of New York, where she also teaches Asian American Studies in the Center for Ethnic Studies. Her research examines the racial politics of antiviolence work, the role of legal and medical institutions in constructing and responding to social problems, and social movements that build strategies of accountability outside punishment. Soniya Munshi is a member of the National Collective of INCITE! Women, Gender Non- Conforming, and Trans People of Color Against Violence and the Critical Ethnic Studies Association Working Group.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
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1
It is impossible to make sense out of either the past or the present without using
race, class, gender, and sexuality as central categories of description and analy-
sis. Yet many of us are the products of an educational system that has taught
us to ignore these categories and thus not to see the differences in power and
privilege that surround us. As a result, events that some people identify as clear
examples of sexism or racism appear to others to be simply “the way things are.”
Understandably, this difference in outlook often makes conversation difficult and
frustrating. A basic premise of this book is that much of what passes for a neu-
tral perspective across the disciplines and in cultural life smuggles in elements of
class, race, and gender bias and distortion. Because the so- called neutral point of
view is so pervasive, it is often difficult to identify. One of the goals of this text is to
help the reader learn to recognize some of the ways in which issues of race, class,
and gender are embedded in ordinary discourse and daily life. Learning to identify
and employ race, class, and gender as fundamental categories of description and
analysis is essential if we wish to understand our own lives and the lives of others.
The Challenges of Studying Race, Class, and Gender As we begin our study together, some differences from other academic enter-
prises are immediately apparent. Whereas students and faculty in an introductory
literature or chemistry class rarely begin the semester with deeply felt and firmly
entrenched attitudes toward the subject, almost every student in a course that
deals with issues of race, class, gender, and sexuality enters the room on the first
day with strong feelings, and almost every faculty member does so as well. The
consequences can be either very good or very bad. Under the best conditions, if
we acknowledge our feelings head on, those feelings can provide the basis for a
passionate and personal study of the topics and can make this course something
out of the ordinary, a class that has real long- term meaning both for students
and for teachers.
This material presents many challenges. Racism, sexism, heterosexism, and
class privilege are all systems of oppression with their own particular history and
their own intrinsic logic (or illogic). Therefore it is important to explore each of
these systems on its own terms; at the same time, these systems operate in con-
junction with one another to form an enormously complex set of interlocking
INTRODUCTION
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2 Introduction
and self- perpetuating relations of domination and subordination. It is essential
that we understand the ways in which these systems overlap, intersect, and play
off one another. For purposes of analysis, it may be necessary to talk as if it were
possible to abstract race or sexuality from, say, gender and class, and for a time
subject a dimension to exclusive scrutiny, even though such distinctions are never
possible in reality. When we engage in this kind of abstraction, we should never
lose sight of the fact that any particular individual has an ethnic background,
a class location, an age, a sexual orientation, a religious orientation, a gender,
and that all these characteristics are inseparable from the person and from one
another. Always, the particular combination of these identities shapes the individ-
ual and locates him or her in society.
It is also true that in talking about racism, sexism, and heterosexism in the con-
text of class, we may have to make generalizations about the experience of different
groups of people, even as we affirm that each individual is unique. For example,
in order to highlight similarities in the experiences of some individuals, this book
often talks about “people of color” or “women of color,” even though these terms
are somewhat problematic. When I refer to “women” in this book instead of “white
women” or “women of color,” it is usually in order to focus on the particular expe-
riences or the legal status of women as women. Yet for the purposes of discussion
and analysis, it is often necessary to make artificial distinctions in order to focus
on particular aspects of experience that may not be separable in reality. Language
both mirrors reality and helps to structure it. No wonder, then, that it is so difficult
to use our language in ways that adequately address our topics.
Structure of the Book This book begins with an examination of the ways in which race, class, gender, and
sexuality have been socially constructed in the United States as “differences” in
the form of hierarchies. What exactly does it mean to claim that someone or some
group of people is “different”? What kind of evidence might be offered to support
this claim? What does it mean to construct differences? And how does society
treat people who are categorized in this way? The readings in Parts I, II, III, and IV
are intended to initiate a dialogue about the ways in which U.S. society constructs
difference, and the social, political, and personal consequences that flow from that
construction. These readings encourage us to think about the meaning of racism,
sexism, heterosexism, and class privilege, and how these systems intersect.
Part I treats the idea of difference itself as a social construct, one that under-
lies and grounds racism, sexism, class privilege, and homophobia. Each of the
authors included would agree that while some of these differences may appear to
be “natural” or given in nature, they are in fact socially constructed, and the mean-
ings and values associated with these differences create a hierarchy of power
and privilege which, precisely because it does appear to be “natural,” is used to
rationalize inequality.
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Introduction 3
Part II introduces the concept of “oppression” in order to examine racism,
sexism, heterosexism, and class privilege as intersecting systems of oppression
that ensure advantages for some and diminished opportunities for others. Part III
moves us beyond a black/white paradigm for thinking about issues of race and
examines some of the complexities of the experiences and the challenges that
arise from living in a genuinely diverse, multicultural society in which white privi-
lege continues to play a major role in shaping economic, political, and social life.
Part IV provides us with concrete examples of how the systems of oppression
operate in contemporary society. Through news articles and other materials, we
get a first- hand look at the kinds of discrimination that are faced by members of
groups subject to unequal and discriminatory treatment.
Defining racism and sexism is always a volatile undertaking. Most of us have
strong feelings about race and gender relations and have a stake in the way those
relations are portrayed and analyzed. Definitions are powerful. They can focus
attention on certain aspects of reality and make others disappear. Parts I through
IV are intended to examine the process of definition. The readings allow us to dis-
cuss the ways in which we have been taught to think about race, class, and gender
difference and to examine how these differences manifest themselves in daily life.
Part V provides statistics and analyses that demonstrate the impact of economic
structures on race, class, and gender differences in people’s lives. Whereas previ-
ous selections depend primarily on narrative to define and illustrate discrimination
and oppression, the material in Part V presents current data, much of it drawn
from U.S. government sources, that document the ways in which socially con-
structed differences mean real differences in opportunity, expectations, and treat-
ment. These differences are brought to life in the articles, poems, and stories in
Part VI, offering glimpses into the lives of women and men of different ethnic and
class backgrounds, who express their sexuality and cultures in a variety of ways.
Although many selections are highly personal, each points beyond the individual’s
experience to social policy or practice or to culturally conditioned attitudes.
When people first begin to recognize the enormous toll that racism, sexism,
heterosexism, and class privilege takes, they often are overwhelmed. How can
we reconcile our belief that the United States extends liberty and justice and
equal opportunity for all with the reality presented in these pages? How has the
disconnect between our beliefs and our actual experiences happened? At this
point we must turn to history.
Part VII highlights important aspects of the history of subordinated groups in
the United States by focusing on historical documents that address race and gen-
der issues in U.S. law since the beginning of the Republic. When these documents
are read in the context of the earlier material describing race, gender, and class
differences in contemporary society, they give us a way of using the past to make
sense of the present. Focusing on the legal status of women of all colors and men
of color allows us to distill hundreds of years of history down to a manageable
size, while still providing the historical information needed to make sense of con-
temporary society.
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4 Introduction
Our survey of racism and sexism in the United States, past and present, has shown
that these phenomena can assume different forms in different contexts. For some,
these experiences are still all too real today; for others they reflect a crude, blatant
racism that seems incompatible with contemporary life. But racism, sexism, homo-
phobia, and class privilege are in fact perpetuated in contemporary society— why do
these divisions and the accompanying differences in opportunity and achievement
continue? How are they reproduced? Part VIII offers some suggestions.
The selections in Part VIII focus on how our conceptions of others— and,
equally important, our conceptions of ourselves— help perpetuate racism, sexism,
heterosexism, and class privilege. The discussion moves beyond the specificity
of stereotypes; it analyzes how modes of conceptualizing reality itself are condi-
tioned by forces that are not always obvious. Racism, sexism, heterosexism, and
classism are not only systems of oppression that provide advantages and privi-
leges to some, they are not simply identifiable attitudes, policies, and practices
that affect individuals’ lives; racism, sexism, heterosexism, and classism operate
on a basic level to structure what we come to think of as “reality.” As such, they
limit our possibilities and personhood. They cause us to internalize beliefs that dis-
tort our perspectives and expectations and make it more difficult to identify the
origins of unequal and unjust distribution of resources. This hierarchy of privilege
and opportunity has been institutionalized throughout our society, and in this way
it has been rationalized and normalized. We grow up being taught that the pre-
vailing hierarchy in society is natural and inevitable, perhaps even desirable, and
so we fail to identity that unequal and unjust distribution as a problem.
Finally, Part IX offers some suggestions for moving beyond racism, sexism,
heterosexism, and classism. These selections are intended to stimulate discussion
about the kinds of change we might wish to explore in order to transform society.
Some of the articles offer ideas about the causes of and cures for the pervasive
social and economic inequality and injustice that are documented in this vol-
ume and suggest ways to revise our society and our social relationships. Others
move from theory to practice by offering very specific suggestions about, and
concrete examples of, interrupting the cycle of oppression and bringing about
social change. Some of these articles suggest things that individuals can do in the
course of everyday life in order to make a difference; others provide examples of
people working together to bring about social change. The task is enormous, time
is short, and our collective future is at stake.
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Selection Title 5
The Social Construction of Difference: Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality
5
Every society grapples with the question of how to distribute its wealth, power,
resources, and opportunities. In some cases, the distribution is relatively egalitar-
ian; in others, it is dramatically unequal. Those societies that tend toward a less
egalitarian distribution have adopted various ways to apportion privilege; some
have used age, others have used ancestry. U.S. society, like many others, places
a priority on sex, race, and class. To this end, race and gender differences have
often been portrayed as unbridgeable and immutable.
Men and women have historically been portrayed as polar opposites with
innately different abilities and capacities. The very traits that are considered
positive in a man are seen as signs of dysfunction in a woman, and the qualities
that are praised in women are often ridiculed in men. We need only look at the
representation of women in U.S. politics where, despite making up a majority of
the population, women hold less than 20 percent of congressional seats, or at
the small percentage (9 percent2) of male nurses in the profession to see that
ideas about gender differences shape our view of what men and women can and
cannot do.
Race difference has been portrayed in a similarly binary fashion. White- skinned
people of European origin have viewed themselves as innately superior in intelli-
gence and ability to people with darker skin or different physical characteristics.
As both the South Carolina Slave Code of 1712 and the Dred Scott Decision, in
Part VII of this text, make clear, “Negroes” were believed to be members of a
PART I
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6 PART I The Social Construction of Difference: Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality
different and lesser race. Their enslavement, like the genocide carried out against
Native Americans, was justified on the basis of these assumed differences. In the
Southwest, Anglo landowners claimed that “Orientals” and Mexicans were natu-
rally suited to perform certain kinds of brutal, sometimes crippling, farm labor to
which whites were “physically unable to adapt.”3
Class status, too, has been correlated with supposed differences in innate abil-
ity and moral worth. Property qualifications for voting have been used not only to
prevent African Americans from exercising the right to vote, but also to exclude
poor whites. From the beginnings of U.S. society, owning property was considered
an indication of superior intelligence and character.
We begin this book with an entirely different premise. All the readings in this
first part argue that far from reflecting natural and innate differences among
people, the categories of gender, race, and class are socially constructed. Rather
than being “given” in nature, they reflect culturally constructed differences that
maintain the prevailing distribution of power and privilege in a society, and they
change in relation to changes in social, political, and economic life.
At first this may seem to be a strange claim. On the face of it, whether a person
is male or female or a member of a particular race seems to be a straightforward
question of biology. But like most differences that are alleged to be “natural” and
“immutable,” or unchangeable, the categories of race and gender are far more
complex than they might seem.
Social scientists often distinguish between “sex” as a category that is assigned
at birth and “gender” as the particular set of socially constructed meanings that
are associated with each sex. Although “sex” is often assumed to be natural or
biological, even sex is socially constructed. As Susan Stryker shows in this part,
sex collapses complex and diverse physiology, biology, and genetics into only two
available options: male or female.
The meaning of classification as a man or as a woman differs from culture to
culture and within each society as well as over different periods of time. It is this
difference in connotation or meaning that theorists point to when they claim that
gender is socially constructed. What is understood as “naturally” masculine or
feminine behavior in one society may be the exact opposite of what is considered
“natural” for women or men in another culture. Furthermore, while it is true that
most societies have sex- role stereotypes that identify certain jobs or activities as
appropriate for women and others for men, and claim that these divisions reflect
“natural” differences in ability and/or interest, there is little consistency in the
kinds of task that have been so categorized. In some societies it is women who
are responsible for agricultural labor, and in others it is men. Even within cultures
that claim that women are unsuited for heavy manual labor, some women (usually
women of color and poor white working women) have always been expected and
required to perform backbreaking physical work— on plantations, in factories, on
farms, in commercial laundries, and in their homes. Anthropologist Gayle Rubin
explains it this way:
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PART I The Social Construction of Difference: Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality 7
Gender is a socially imposed division of the sexes. . . . Men and women are, of course, different. But they are not as different as day and night, earth and sky, yin and yang, life and death. In fact, from the standpoint of nature, men and women are closer to each other than either is to anything else— for instance, mountains, kangaroos, or coconut palms. The idea that men and women are more different from one another than either is from anything else must come from somewhere other than nature.4
In fact, we might go on to argue, along with Rubin, that “far from being an
expression of natural differences, exclusive gender identity is the suppression of
natural similarities.”5 Boys and girls, women and men, are under enormous pres-
sure from the earliest ages to conform to sex- role stereotypes that divide basic
human attributes between the two sexes. In Selection 4, Judith Lorber argues
that differences between women and men are never merely differences but are
constructed hierarchically so that women are always portrayed as different in the
sense of being deviant and deficient. Central to this construction of difference
is the social construction of sexuality, a process Jonathan Ned Katz and Michael
Kimmel analyze in Selections 5 and 6. In Selection 7, Susan Stryker asks us to
evaluate our assumptions about the relationship among sex, gender, and sexuality,
and posits that transgender feminism reveals the limits of theorizing about gender
on the basis of sexed bodies.
The idea of race has been socially constructed in similar ways. The claim that
race is a social construction challenges the once- popular belief that people are
born into different races that have innate, biologically based differences in intel-
lect, temperament, and character. The idea of ethnicity, in contrast to race, focuses
on the shared social/cultural experiences and heritages of various groups and
divides or categorizes them according to these shared experiences and traits. The
important difference here is that those who talk of race and racial identity believe
that they are dividing people according to biological or genetic similarities and
differences, whereas those who talk of ethnicity simply point to commonalities
that are understood as social, not biological, in origin.
Contemporary historian Ronald Takaki suggests that in the United States,
“[r]ace . . . has been a social construction that has historically set apart racial
minorities from European immigrant groups.”6 Michael Omi and Howard Winant,
authors of Selection 1, would agree. They maintain that race is more a political
categorization than a biological or scientific category. They point to the rela-
tively arbitrary way in which the category has been constructed and suggest
that changes in the meaning and use of racial distinctions can be correlated with
economic and political changes in U.S. society. Dark- skinned men and women
from Spain were once classified as “white” along with fair- skinned immigrants
from England and Ireland, whereas early Greek immigrants were often classified as
“Orientals” and subjected to the same discrimination that Chinese and Japanese
immigrants experienced under the laws of California and other Western states.
In South Africa, Japanese immigrants were categorized as “white,” not “black” or
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8 PART I The Social Construction of Difference: Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality
“colored,” presumably because the South African economy depended on trade
with Japan. In contemporary U.S. society, dark- skinned Latin people are often
categorized as “black” by those who continue to equate something called “race”
with skin color. In Selection 2, Pem Davidson Buck argues that whiteness and
white privilege were constructed historically along with race difference in order
to divide working people from each other and in this way protect the wealth and
power of a small, privileged elite. In Selection 3, “How Jews Became White Folks,”
Karen Brodkin provides a detailed account of the specific ways in which the status
and classifications of one group, Jewish immigrants to the United States, changed
over time as a result of and in relation to economic, political, and social changes
in our society.
The claim that race is a social construction is not meant to deny the obvious
differences in skin color and physical characteristics that people manifest. It sim-
ply sees these differences on a continuum of diversity rather than as reflecting
innate genetic differences among peoples. Scientists have long argued that all
human beings are descended from a common stock.
Writing about racism, Algerian- born French philosopher Albert Memmi once
explained that racism consists of stressing a difference between individuals or pop-
ulations. The difference can be real or imagined and in itself doesn’t entail racism
(or, by analogy, sexism). It is not difference itself that leads to subordination, but the
interpretation of difference. It is the assigning of a value to a particular difference
in a way that discredits an individual or group to the advantage of another that
transforms mere difference into deficiency.7 In this country, both race and gender
differences have been carefully constructed as hierarchy. This means that in the
United States, it is not merely that women are described as different from men, but
also that the difference is understood to leave women deficient. Similarly with race:
People of color are described as different from white people, and that difference
too is understood as deviance from an acceptable norm— even as pathology— and
in both cases, difference is used to rationalize racism and sexism.
In Selection 6, Michael Kimmel argues that homophobia is “intimately interwo-
ven with both sexism and racism.” According to Kimmel, the ideal of masculinity
that prevails in U.S. society today is one that reflects the needs and interests
of capitalism. It effectively defines “women, nonwhite men, nonnative- born men,
homosexual men” as “other” and deficient, and in this way renders members of
all these groups as well as large numbers of white working class and middle class
men powerless in contemporary society.
Our understanding of the ways in which race and gender differences have
been constructed is further enriched by Douglas Baynton’s analysis in Selec-
tion 9. Baynton argues that the idea of disability has functioned historically to
justify unequal treatment for women and minority groups as well as to justify
inequality for disabled people themselves. In his essay, he explores the ways in
which the concept of disability has been used at different moments in history
to disenfranchise various groups in U.S. society and to legitimize discrimination
against them.
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PART I The Social Construction of Difference: Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality 9
The social construction of class is analogous, but not identical, to that of race
and gender. Differences between rich and poor, which result from particular ways
of structuring the economy, are socially constructed as innate differences among
people. These differences are then used to rationalize or justify the unequal dis-
tribution of wealth and power that results from economic decisions made to per-
petuate privilege. In addition, straightforward numerical differences in earnings
are rarely the basis for conferring class status. For example, school teachers and
college professors are usually considered to have a higher status than plumb-
ers and electricians, even though the earnings of plumbers and electricians are
often significantly higher. Where people are presumed to fit into the class hier-
archy has less to do with clear- cut numerical categories than it does with the
socially constructed superiority of those who perform mental labor (i.e., work with
their heads) over those who perform manual labor (i.e., work with their hands).
In addition, the status of various occupations and the class position the occupa-
tions imply often change depending on whether the occupation is predominantly
female or male and on its racial composition.
Equally significant, differences in wealth and family income have been over-
laden with value judgments and stereotypes to the extent that identifying some-
one as a member of the middle class, working class, or underclass carries implicit
implications about his or her moral character and ability. In the nineteenth cen-
tury, proponents of Calvinism and social Darwinism maintained that being poor
in itself indicated that an individual was morally flawed and thus deserved his or
her poverty— relieving society of any responsibility for social ills. More recently, as
Susan Greenbaum discusses in Selection 8, the idea that poverty can be blamed
on family structure and cultural values was brought to the fore again in the 1965
government- issued Moynihan Report, which claimed that African American family
values were producing a “tangle of pathology.” This approach to blaming the poor
for being poor refuses to see poverty as a social and economic problem that we
can collectively address.
Finally, class difference can be said to be socially constructed in a way that
parallels the construction of race and gender as difference. In this respect, the
organization of U.S. society makes hierarchy or class itself appear natural and
inevitable. We grade and rank children from their earliest ages and claim to
be sorting them according to something called “natural ability.” The tracking
that permeates our system of education both reflects and creates the expec-
tation that there are A people, B people, C people, and so forth. Well before
high school, children come to define themselves and others in just this way
and accept this kind of classification as natural. Consequently, quite apart from
accepting the particular mythology or ideology of class difference prevalent at
any given moment (i.e., “the poor are lazy and worthless” versus “the poor are
meek and humble and will inherit the earth”), we come to think it natural and
inevitable that there should be class differences in the first place. In the final
essay in Part I, Jean Baker Miller asks and answers the question “What do people
do to people who are different from them and why?”