male AND black AND white, female AND white
by
kipito
03/23/2008, 2:43 PM #
a classmate said a couple weeks ago, nobody wins when they play "oppression olympics." that's obvious from some of these threads.
Obama can "pass" as black or white, and does so when he so chooses, and he is adept at it. No woman can switch hit by passing as a man or a woman...
this argument is a little tricky, i'm going to say the difference is, obama actually is black AND white. according to the way race is constructed in our society, he actually meets the criteria for both.
instead of trying to "pass," believe he's trying to stand n the border between the two. since he actually is biracial, and has strong family and community connections in both, it's probably the only honest way to handle it. i read that he had a brief college period when he acknowledged only his black side, before realizing how that was taking away a vital part of who he was.
this connects with those who are complaining about him calling his grandmother a "typical white person." this is one of the people who raised him, she is part of him, genetically and culturally. to think of his comment a different way, obama is white, as much as he is black. and if we think of him as a white person, talking about what a typical white person is, that changes it.
so what does it mean, how is it useful to call obama simply "black" without the plural identity he has (and claims frequently)?
comparing this to your point: i don't like your claim that a vote against clinton is a vote "against a liberal egalitarian view of gender equality." there is a ridiculous argument, that anyone who doesn't vote for obama is afraid of having a black man as president. as another response says, there are many reasons to choose or not choose someone. my ideas about hillary have less to do with gender roles than her experience.
you could very well be right, that gender identity is "primary" in some way. but in the voting booth, the majority of black females are voting for obama. this is hard to simplify, but let's assume it really is only about race and gender politics:
i think they consider themselves black, they consider obama black (not white, even though he is). race seems "primary" to them. and white women, they consider themselves women, they consider obama a black (not white!) man. they believe gender is primary, and might even claim race is "not an issue." the black women would probably never claim gender is not an issue, but they oviously disagree with you on how important it is.
is this a strategic error, on their part? would they be "better off" with the decisions which a white woman would make? maybe. but it doesn't mean they're necessarily misogynist, or stuck on gender stereotypes.