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The Sorrows of Race and Gender in the 2008 Election

By Robert Jensen, AlterNet. Posted May 30, 2008.


Much of what made progressive movements great has been lost in America's pathological entitlement, exceptionalism, and imperialism.
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[This is an expanded version of a talk given to the University Democrats at the University of Texas at Austin, April 16, 2008.]

It may seem odd to talk of sorrows around race and gender in politics when we are a few months away from being able to vote for a white woman or a black man for president of the United States. When I was born in 1958, any suggestion that such an election was on the horizon would have been laughed off as crazy. In the first presidential campaign I paid attention to as an eighth-grader in 1972, Shirley Chisholm -- who four years earlier had become the first black woman to win a seat in Congress -- was to most Americans a curiosity not a serious contender. Today, things are different.

Today Hillary Clinton’s and Barack Obama’s battle for the Democratic Party nomination suggests progress. Though the pace of progress toward gender and racial justice may seem slow, we should take a moment to honor the people whose struggles for the liberation of women and non-white people have brought us to this historic moment. If not for the vision and courage of those in the feminist and civil-rights movements there would be no possibility of a contest between Clinton and Obama, and the debt we owe those activists is enormous.

But instead of getting too caught up in this moment, we should reflect more deeply on that history -- not just on what was won but what has been lost. We have an obligation to those who sacrificed in those struggles for liberation to reflect honestly, and if we do that I believe it will lead to sorrow.

I don’t take this sorrow to be a bad thing. Today one of the most important virtues is the ability to understand sorrow clearly, to confront sorrow openly, to feel sorrow deeply, and in the end to accept the sorrows that come with being human in the modern world. Such sorrow is especially important in a society built on delusional beliefs about manifest destiny and endless expansion, world domination and American exceptionalism. The best of a people is carried not by those who pander to a pathological sense of entitlement, but by those who are not afraid to live with sorrow.

As one of my favorite songwriters has put it, “Those are lost who/try to cross through/the sorrow fields too easily.”[1]

So, let us heed Eliza Gilkyson and not race across those sorrow fields. Let us walk through them deliberately, carefully, and responsibly. Let us learn from that journey.

What are the sorrows to which I’m referring? I don’t mean the disgust and distress that many of us feel when we read the blogs, listen to talk radio, or watch cable TV news -- places where some of our fellow citizens and journalists wallow in the sexism and racism that still infects so much of this society. I don’t mean the ways in which, even in polite liberal circles, Hillary Clinton is scrutinized in ways no man would ever be. I don’t mean the ways in which, even in polite liberal circles, Barack Obama’s blackness is examined for either its inadequacies or excesses.

The attacks on Clinton because she is a woman and Obama because he is black should make us angry and may leave us feeling dejected, but for me they are not the stuff of sorrow. We can organize against those expressions of sexism and racism; we can mobilize to counter those forces; we can respond to those people.

Remembering the radicals

My sorrow comes from the recognition that the radical analyses of the feminist and civil-rights movements -- the core insights of those movements that made it possible when I was young to imagine real liberation -- are no longer recognized as a part of the conversation in the dominant political culture of the United States. It’s not just that such analyses have not been universally adopted -- it would be naïve to think that in a few decades too many dramatic changes could be put into place, after all -- but that they have been pushed even further to the margins, almost completely out of public view.

For example, when I talk about these ideas with students at the University of Texas it is for some the first time they have heard such things. It’s not that they have rejected the analyses or condemned the movements, but they did not know such radical ideas exist or had ever existed. These students often do not know that these movements did not simply condemn the worst overt manifestations of sexism and racism, but went to the heart of the patriarchal and white-supremacist nature of U.S. society while at the same time focusing attention on the imperialist nature of our foreign policy and predatory nature of corporate capitalism. The most compelling arguments emerging from those movements didn’t suggest a kindler-and-gentler imperialist capitalist state, but an end to those unjust and unsustainable systems.

The irony is that Clinton and Obama, who today are viable candidates because of those movements, provide such clear evidence of the death of the best hopes of those movements. Those two candidates have turned away from these compelling ideas so completely that neither speaks of patriarchy and white supremacy. These are not candidates opposing imperialism and capitalism but candidates telling us why we should believe that they can better manage the system.


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Robert Jensen is a journalism professor at the University of Texas at Austin, and the author of, most recently, The Heart of Whiteness: Confronting Race, Racism and White Privilege (City Lights Books).

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Herein Lies The Crux Of The Problem
Posted by: desidid on May 30, 2008 4:50 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The radical civil-rights forces, which I think were at the core of that movement, offered a critique of white supremacy and the hierarchies reinforced by white-supremacist values. Those activists spoke not only of equal rights for non-white people but of an end to systems of domination more generally. The most powerful articulations of feminism and the civil-rights movement did not simply say, “Let’s leave these fundamentally unjust and unsustainable systems in place but put some women and non-white people in positions of power.” They argued for a transformation of the systems.

Today those who claim to be progressive, and are White have usurped control of what is progressive, and shout down any voices of color who dissent from their position. And as with Sen. Clinton's supporters they have determined that long suffering White women have more of a claim to the presidency than a Black man. The premise here is that all "men" are created equal. A stupid premise in light of unemployment numbers for White women (4%) vs. Black men (10.5). They have incorporated Sen. Clinton's time as a first wife with her political record and made claims about her experience that aren't true. Thus they believe that any experience held by a White woman is superior to that of a Black man/woman. Sen. Obama isn't strident about his experience as a Black man in America for very good reasons. One need look no further then to the response to Rev. Wright's accurate comments about the Black experience and America's preoccupation with subjugating people of color. No Black person will win the White House by stating the obvious to a majority culture and Robert Jensen is old enough to know that.

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Jensen is Losing His Touch
Posted by: goldmarx on May 30, 2008 6:47 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What? No mention of pornography as the root of all evil? Mentioning the very phrase "radical feminism" without the obligatory nod to Andrea Dworkin?

Jensen writing an essay in which I am in total agreement?

What's going on here?

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The true sorrow of progressives...and hope
Posted by: Kym525 on May 30, 2008 4:51 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One of the saddest things I have discovered in many liberal blogs, including alternet, is the level of ignorance when it comes to racial and gender issues. Very seldom can we discuss race in a open and honest way without at least one "well my family didn't own slaves so why should I feel like it's my fault" or "I'm not privileged", as if the notion of privilege is all about money, which it is not (read anti-racist educator Tim Wise who essays about what privilege is at length). With gender issues, it becomes men against women and vice-versa with neither gender making much headway. I also see it with feminists against other feminists, as if there's only ONE way to be a feminist.

I was dismayed at the numerous hateful and insensitive remarks that accompanied a past alternet article about black children ending up in foster care. Bascially, my fellow liberal bretheren had no problem blaming the victim and citing the worst negative stereotypes ascribed to black women and black people in general. I have also seen this level of negativity when the issue of illegal immigration comes up, then these are the same people who bemoan the fact that any such discussions are always tainted by racism, even though they themselves may not be.

I guess in my black feminist liberal naivete, it was only right-wing conservatives who held heinous beliefs about anyone who wasn't white, male and christian. Surprise, surprise.

However, many are willing to honestly LISTEN to voices and experiences that are not their own. On the other hand, it seems to be those who consider themselves intelligent and open-minded, who tend to be the farthest from it.

What I have discovered is that unlike conservatives who pretend that everything is hunky-dory in their lily-white world, most progressives are willing to struggle and to work towards a deeper understanding of the things that divide us. In the case of this election, both sides are getting a crash course in both race and gender issues and perhaps realizing that one cannot play oppression olympics without diminishing the experiences of those who also deal with racism. Yes, what we are going through is messy, with all sides lobbing barrages at each other, but in the end, I feel such trials by fire can only strengthen the progressive movement. Conservatives merely dwell in their cloud-cuckoo-land--a place where women and minorities knew their place.

Honestly, I'd rather go through all the growing pains than never grow up at all.

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What else is new
Posted by: Donna_Darko on May 30, 2008 6:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our Presidential candidates are centrist. We have a third party but the two parties have all the money. Campaign finance reform is the answer. bell hooks' Feminism is for everybody touches on all these topics. I also recommend the Combahee River Collective Statement (1977).

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