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We can’t talk about racism without understanding whiteness
Author: Priyamvada Gopal
Date: 2020
From: Gale Opposing Viewpoints Online Collection
Publisher: Gale, a Cengage Company
Document Type: Viewpoint essay
Length: 1,199 words
Content Level: (Level 5)
Lexile Measure: 1340L

Full Text:
Article Commentary

“One distinctive feature of whiteness as ideology is that it can make itself invisible and thereby make its operations more lethal and
harder to challenge.”
Priyamvada Gopal is an academic and author of Insurgence Empire: Anticolonial Resistance and British Dissent. In the following
viewpoint, the author argues that people must confront the ideology of whiteness and abolish its power in order to achieve a post-
racial society. Referring to conversations surrounding the Black Lives Matter movement, Gopal characterizes Black lives as
historically undervalued. Further, she asserts, if all lives are supposed to matter, Black lives must matter. The author contends
helping Black lives achieve parity is not racist, and she suggests that refusing to understand this is a choice. In all, Gopal maintains,
confronting the idea of whiteness will require people to have difficult and uncomfortable conversations or risk hatred prevailing.

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As you read, consider the following questions:

According to the author, what is whiteness, and why is this significant?1.
How does Gopal use her social status as a Brahmin in India to support her argument that oppression works downward, and2.
that white supremacy must be abolished? Do you find it persuasive? Why or why not?
In your opinion, is achieving a post-racial society possible? Explain your answer.3.

When it comes to race and racism, we focus on those at the sharp end of discrimination from black people routinely subjected to
police brutality to people of colour missing from positions of influence. Progressive ideals invoke “inclusion” for ethnic minorities, or
special bias training. These measures may be necessary, but they put the focus squarely on those subjected to victimisation
rather than the system that perpetuates racism.

What results is a form of benevolence whereby some people of colour get “included” as part of diversity measures, even as social
hierarchies and habits of thought in white-majority societies remain largely unchanged.

The truth is that there is nothing pleasant about confronting the reality of an acute racial hierarchy. If the racial order is really to
change and there are those who don’t want it to it is not just black lives or racial minorities that should be the topic of
discussion, but the racial ideology that currently calls the shots in western societies.

This is what brings us to “whiteness” which is not a biological category so much as a set of ideas and practices about race that
has emerged from a bedrock of white supremacy, itself the legacy of empire and slavery. Confronting the idea of whiteness involves
far more uncomfortable discussions than “inclusion”, especially for people deemed white, since it involves self-examination and
acknowledging ugly truths, both historical and contemporary. It is simply easier to try to shut it out or down.

I found this out to my cost last week when I tweeted a response to the racially inflammatory “White Lives Matter” banner flown over
the Etihad Stadium after Manchester City and Burnley footballers had “taken the knee” to honour George Floyd. My tweet,
deliberately playing with the wording of the banner by qualifying it, made the point that white lives cannot be deemed to matter
because they are white, that it should not be whiteness that gives those lives value. In addition to the tsunami of racist sewage that
immediately came my way, littered with N-words and P-words along with sexist slurs, rape fantasies, death threats and open
declarations that “white lives matter more”, I was repeatedly asked why, if white lives did not matter as white lives, do black lives
matter? Was that also not also racist?

No, it is not also racist. White lives already matter more than others so to keep proclaiming they matter is to add excess value to
them, tilting us dangerously into white supremacy. This doesn’t mean that all white people in western societies are materially well-off
or don’t experience hardship, but that they don’t do so by virtue of the fact that they are white. Black lives remain undervalued and in
order for us to get to the desirable point where all lives (really do) matter, they must first achieve parity by mattering. It’s not really that
hard to understand unless you choose not to.

Studies of “whiteness” are not new. Respected scholars, such as the late Noel Ignatiev, author of How the Irish Became White, and
David Roediger, have studied the history and sociology of whiteness in great detail. Ignatiev, who was Jewish, wrote about the
“abolition of whiteness”, not as a call to eliminate white people but a system of racial entitlement that necessarily relied on the
exclusion of those deemed to be lesser. For Ignatiev, whiteness was not a biological fact so much as a kind of ideological club where
“the members go through life accepting the benefits of membership, without thinking about the cost” to others.

Over time, people have been added to the club and aspire to membership of it, from the Irish and European Jews to many Asians
today. One distinctive feature of whiteness as ideology is that it can make itself invisible and thereby make its operations more lethal
and harder to challenge. Science and the humanities are largely in accord that “race” is not a biological category, but a way of
creating power differentials, which have practical consequences. If that power differential in western societies is to be removed, then
the ideology at the top whiteness must be abolished. Only then can the abolition of all other racial categories and the
post-racial world we so often claim to espouse actually follow.

Although in Britain I am racialised as “non-white” or Asian, in my birth country of India I have some experience of what it is like to be a
member of a powerful but invisible ruling category. As a Brahmin (the “highest-ranking” tier of the deeply hierarchical Hindu caste
system), I belong to a social grouping that operates much like whiteness does. It rules the roost, is not disadvantaged by virtue of
caste (though there are those who might suffer from poverty or misogyny), and it treats any challenge to its power as a form of
victimisation or “reverse oppression”. For the record, there is no such thing: oppression only operates downwards. This is why, at the
same time as I reinforced Ignatiev’s call for the abolition of “whiteness”, I repeated that Brahmin supremacy in India must also be
abolished.

One of my less discourteous correspondents last week asked me, using only one expletive, why people “need a manual for race
relations” when we could just respect each other. Unfortunately, until we get to a point where all lives really do matter, there is no
point in declaring that race doesn’t make a difference or that equality exists, when it clearly doesn’t. “White lives matter” implicitly
suggests whites matter more than others. “Black lives matter” is saying those lives need to matter more than they have, that society
needs to give them more weight. Until we square up to the ugly realities of how whiteness operates lethally, invisibly, powerfully

we are doomed to fighting a toxic and pointless culture war, where the only winners are those who want hatred to prevail.

Full Text: COPYRIGHT 2020 Gale, a Cengage Company
Source Citation (MLA 8th Edition)
Gopal, Priyamvada. “We can’t talk about racism without understanding whiteness.” Gale Opposing Viewpoints Online Collection,

Gale, 2020. Gale In Context: Opposing Viewpoints,
https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/RFSNJJ564253926/OVIC?u=ccsf_main&sid=OVIC&xid=f403357c. Accessed 1 Nov. 2020.
Originally published as “We can’t talk about racism without understanding whiteness,” The Guardian, 4 July 2020.

Gale Document Number: GALE|RFSNJJ564253926

Hill 1

Kyle Hill

Professor Hill

ENGL 1A & 1AS

3 February 2021

Sample Unit 2 Reading Journal: “Racism Today is Subtle, Insidious, and Systemic”

● Dr. Quist-Adade’s thesis or central claim is that racism is even more a problem

today because people are scared to talk about it for fear of being labeled racist or

losing privilege, so they silently participate in a system that advantages some

and disadvantages others; he also emphasizes that racism is a social construct

that people have created to signal insiders and outsiders and that behaviors can

change – this is not a hopeless situation.

● Dr. Quist-Adade’s paper seemed logical and well presented to me. The one thing

that I did not observe Dr. Quist-Adade do in the paper was handling opposing

viewpoints. While Dr. Quist-Adade does cite sources in his paper, he mainly uses

his sources to support and illustrate his ideas, not necessarily challenge them.

It’s hard for me to imagine what those opposing viewpoints might be since I tend

to agree with Dr. Quist-Adade. For this reason, I think it would have been helpful

for me to see how others might argue against the idea that racism is subtle and

systemic just so I have a better idea of what the opposition might say.

● “For example, racism in the USA has ceased to be the avowed commitment of

Southern white supremacists. Now its ​INSIDIOUS ​form is an unconscious habit

corrupting legions of Euro-Americans, including some well-meaning ones among

them” (Quist-Adade).

Hill 2

○ Adjective: operating or proceeding in an inconspicuous or seemingly

harmless way but actually with grave effect.

○ My cousin was ready to divorce her husband by the time she realized how

INSIDIOUS ​their daily quarrels and disagreements had become.

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