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I've been meaning to write about RaceFail '09 since ... well, since it started, which was early January. I haven't been able to, for various reasons that have to do with the outbreak* itself - it hurts me too much when I think about it, or I feel too angry with white people - and my own continuing lack of confidence and hurdles with writing. I've finally decided to try limiting myself to a bullet-point style post, so that I'll at least get out there and write something.

*Please note that I use the term "outbreak" to indicate that this is not a discrete event without context. The discussion/argument/imbroglio did not spring up out of nowhere, even though this is the most high-profile issue that has arisen in several months. People of color - readers and writers both - have been analyzing, protesting, fighting back against our lack of representation and misrepresentation in popular media since popular media has been around. And we've been doing it on blogs for as long as blogs have been around. And white people have been - well, they've been doing any number of things: listening, ignoring, helping, learning, digging their heels in and refusing change. This has also been happening the entire time.

1. For those who are still asking, "What is RaceFail '09?" the briefest answer I can manage is: what started as another instance of the discussion about misrepresentation/lack of representation of people of color in science fiction and fantasy has resulted in a particularly public and particularly ugly backlash from (often white) writers and readers.

For a timeline of specific events, please start with this summary by Avalon's Willow. Further events occurred later, as described here by [insanejournal.com profile] rydra_wong, who has also painstakingly collected all the RaceFail-related links she could find, under this tag

If you're ready for further detail, please see my LiveJournal memories for (what I consider) some of the important posts.

And finally, please refer to this guide to the positive, productive actions taken by POC and allies in the face of RaceFail. Not because of. In the face of.

Read as much as you can. Learn as much as you can. If you take nothing else away from this, remember these two things: This is not "just another wankfest," because it's about race, racism, and representation - not individual personality clashes and this or that book. Also, this is not the first or only such conversation, even if it's the first time you've heard of one like this.

2. One of the best responses to RaceFail has, by far, been the creation of Verb Noire, an e-publishing company dedicated to written works by and about people of color and/or queer people. Please support them by donating.

3.I've posted this before, but remember: if you are an Asian woman or an ally, please contribute to the first Asian Women Blog Carnival. The deadline is tomorrow.

4. This is not a new study (it was published in 2007), but it's highly relevant: Subtle Discrimination is More Taxing On The Brain. Instances of ambiguous racism were more detrimental to black test subjects than obvious cases.

"Interestingly, white volunteers were more impaired by overt racism than by the more ambiguous discrimination. Salvatore and Shelton figure this is because whites rarely experience any racism; they do not even notice the subtle forms of racism, and are thrown off balance when they are hit over the head by overt acts. Many blacks, by contrast, have developed coping strategies for the most hateful kinds of racism; it's the constant, vague, just-below-the-surface acts of racism that impair performance, day in and day out."


This is why I'm more disturbed by expressions of privileged ignorance from people whom I have some trust in, rather than dude-on-the-street spouting a racial slur. This is why I care more about creative works that fail in race or other areas when they come from creators who should know better, based on their previous performance (Joss Whedon, I'm looking at you).

5. This is not race-related, but it's important: March 31st was End the R-word Day, a day dedicated to ending the use of "retard"/"retarded" as a derogatory term.

I have succeeded in removing the word from my vocabulary, but I've utterly failed in speaking out to the people around me. There's no excuse for this. I wouldn't tolerate people using "cunt," "pussy," or "gay" as insults to me, so I can't tolerate "retard" used in the same manner.

I will start by resolving to respond to derogatory uses of "retard"/"retarded" by saying, "Please don't use 'retard'/'retarded' as an insult." That's all. It's just a start.
There are 5 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by [identity profile] mahokiwi.insanejournal.com at 09:20pm on 02/04/2009
RE: point 5 I am so bad about this. And I feel bad every time I fail at it, too. I...think...? I have gotten marginally better about, in the past few years, but I know it is not entirely out of my vocab and I don't even really know how it got so ingrained there in the first place :\

w-working on itttttt~
 
posted by [identity profile] sigelphoenix.insanejournal.com at 10:47pm on 02/04/2009
Yeah, it's easy to stop because it's just, you know, not saying a word. But it's hard when this is the word that has been plugged into a cultural space in our language. I don't have that habit with "retarded," but I do with "bitch"-as-a-negative-term, such that I'll hesitate or stumble because I don't want to use it, but I that's the word that comes up first.

So anyway, I'm going to try to say "don't use this word." Iiiff you have other suggestions of ways to say that which don't anger or alienate, I'd be happy to hear them.
 
posted by [identity profile] shadawyn.insanejournal.com at 12:47pm on 03/04/2009
I've been able to stop it--or at least catch myself--in written form (which is the majority of my day-to-day communication), but it still slips verbally.

I'm aware of it, at least, and that will help eradicate sooner or later :/
 
posted by [identity profile] redbird.insanejournal.com at 02:05am on 04/04/2009
I am going to work harder on point 5. :< I am trying to think of a better phrase to use in place of 'shonen retard' and I am coming up blank, though. [keeps thinking]
 
posted by [identity profile] sigelphoenix.insanejournal.com at 12:01am on 05/04/2009
Awesome!

As for an alternative to 'shonen retard' ... 'shonen dumbass'? I mean, it doesn't sound as 'good' to me, but at least part of that is that it's new, I think.

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