Latinos and Whiteness: On Being Sold An Empty White Privilege KnapsackPosted in Articles, Census/Demographics, Latino Studies, Media Archive, Social Science, United States on 2014-06-19 18:17Z by Steven |
Latinos and Whiteness: On Being Sold An Empty White Privilege Knapsack
Race-work, Race-love
2014-06-13
Blanca E. Vega (@BlancaVNYC), writer, educator, and race-worker
Sophia (@sophiagurule) on May 30th replied to my tweet about White Supremacy and Latinidad:
“@BlancaVNYC : and yep #nuncamas. this [choosing White on the Census] has haunted/shaped my life, and used against me, and I’m just done with it.”
To read more of the conversation, click here.
For many Latinos in the U.S., race is still an elusive and misunderstood concept. This is due to many reasons but primarily for this one: Latinos have been taught that we are not a race, that instead, we are an ethnicity, and therefore have the ability/privilege to dodge the race question altogether.
The problem of the 20th century is the problem of the color line – W.E.B. Du Bois
For Latinos, the race question on a Census is confused for the color question. For the 2000 Census, even Latinos who were unmistakably White, Black, Native, or Asian, could pick “Other”. In 2010, “Other” was no longer available for Latinos, thus, forcing them to choose (what many confuse) “Color” for “Race” – and there is a difference, one that is often never unpacked for Latinos.
So, if the problem is the color line, then where do Latinos, who are taught “they have no race” fit in this now 21st century problem?…
…Latinos should remember that while some of us have privileges associated with Whiteness, this is not White Privilege. However, the only way we can understand our own racialization is to identify those areas in which some of us benefit from White Supremacy and where we don’t – a category Eduardo Bonilla Silva calls “honorary white” – and attack those areas if we are truly in the business of killing White Supremacy. This provides a more nuanced understanding of Latinidad, Latinization of race, and the racialization of Latinos, more so than the frames we inherited….
Read the entire article here.