Everyday Erinyes #233

 Posted by at 1:06 pm  Politics
Sep 262020
 

Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”

I considered addressing redlining this week – though technically illegal, it is still very much with us – but I decided since I doubt tha anyone who reads here buys and sells a lot of properties, whereas we all encounter microaggressions and may even have been guilty of then, it would be a more current topic.
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Microaggressions aren’t just innocent blunders – new research links them with racial bias

They’re not just honest or ignorant mistakes, and they can poison an otherwise pleasant interaction.
Hinterhaus Productions/DigitalVision via Getty Images

Jonathan Kanter, University of Washington

A white man shares publicly that a group of Black Harvard graduates “look like gang members to me” and claims he would have said the same of white people dressed similarly. A white physician mistakes a Black physician for a janitor and says it was an honest mistake. A white woman asks to touch a Black classmate’s hair, is scolded for doing so and sulks, “I was just curious.”

It’s a pattern that recurs countless times, in myriad interactions and contexts, across American society. A white person says something that is experienced as racially biased, is called on it and reacts defensively.

These comments and other such subtle snubs, insults and offenses are known as microaggressions. The concept, introduced in the 1970s by Black psychiatrist Chester Pierce, is now the focus of a fierce debate.

young Black woman with her hand up
Most research has focused on the harms done to those on the receiving end of microaggressions.
SDI Productions/E+ via Getty Images

On one side, Black people and a host of others representing multiple diverse communities stand with a wealth of testimonials, lists of different types of microaggressions and compelling scientific evidence documenting how these experiences harm recipients.

Some white people are on board, working to understand, change and join as allies. Still, a cacophony of white voices exists in the public discourse, dismissive, defensive and influential. Their main argument: Microaggressions are innocuous and innocent, not associated with racism at all. Many contend that those who complain about microaggressions are manipulating victimhood and being too sensitive.

Linking bias to microaggressions

Until recently, the majority of research on microaggressions has focused on asking people targeted by microaggressions about their experiences and perspectives, rather than researching the offenders. This previous research is crucial. But with respect to understanding white defensiveness and underlying racial bias, it’s akin to researching why baseball pitchers keep hitting batters with pitches by only interviewing batters about how it feels to get hit.

My colleagues and I – a team of Black, white (myself included) and other psychological scientists and students – went directly to the “pitchers” to untangle the relationship between these expressions and racial bias.

We asked white college students – one group at a university in the Northwest, another at a campus in the southern Midwest – how likely they are to commit 94 commonly described microaggressions that we identified from research publications and Black students we interviewed. For example, you are meeting a Black woman with braids; how likely are you to ask, “Can I touch your hair?”

We also asked our participants to describe their own racial bias using well-known measures. Then, we asked some participants to come to our laboratory to talk about current events with others. Lab observers rated how many explicitly racially biased statements they made in their interactions.

We found direct support for what recipients of microaggressions have been saying all along: Students who are more likely to say they commit microaggressions are more likely to score higher on measures of racial bias. One’s likelihood of microaggressing also predicts how racist one is judged to be by lab observers, as they watch real interactions unfold. We’re currently analyzing the same kind of data from a national sample of adults, and the results look similar.

With some microaggressions, like “Can I touch your hair?,” the influence of racial bias is real but small. When the white woman who asked to touch the Black woman’s hair responds, “I was just curious,” she’s not necessarily lying about her conscious intentions. She likely is unaware of the subtle racial bias that also influences her behavior. One can demonstrate racial bias and curiosity at the same time.

Even small doses of prejudice, especially when they are confusing or ambiguous, are documented to be psychologically harmful for recipients. Our research suggests that some microaggressions, such as asking “Where are you from?” or staying silent during a debate about racism, may be understood as small doses of racial bias, contaminating otherwise good intentions.

In our studies, other kinds of microaggressions, including those that explicitly deny racism, are strongly and explicitly related to white participants’ self-reported levels of racial bias. For instance, the more racial bias a participant says they have, the more likely they are to say, “All lives matter, not just Black lives.” These expressions are more than small doses of toxin. Still, even in these cases, racial bias does not explain all of it, leaving ample room for defensiveness and claims that the recipient is being too sensitive.

In our research, participants who agreed with the statement “A lot of minorities are too sensitive these days” showed some of the highest levels of racial bias.

Addressing microaggressions in context

Amidst chronic and widespread racial injustices, including segregated neighborhoods, disparities in health care outcomes, systemic police bias and rising white supremacist violence, a chorus of Black and other voices also have been expressing pain and anger about the stream of subtle microaggressions they endure as part of daily life in the United States.

Black woman smiles in conversation with women of other races
Those on the receiving end of microaggresions want perpetrators to acknowledge the problem.
Thomas Barwick/DigitalVision via Getty Images

Consistent with our research, they generally are not insisting that offenders admit to being card-carrying racists. They are asking offenders, despite their conscious intentions, to understand and acknowledge the impacts of their behavior. They are asking for understanding that those offended are not imagining things or just being too sensitive. Mostly, they are asking offenders to improve their awareness, stop engaging in behaviors that create and perpetuate race-based harm themselves and join in fighting against the rest of it.

As a clinical psychologist, I know that, even in the best of circumstances, true self-awareness and behavior change are hard work.

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U.S. society provides far from the best of circumstances. At the nation’s birth, people found a way to celebrate democracy, freedom and equality while owning slaves and destroying Indigenous populations, and then found ways to erase many of these horrors from the nation’s collective memory. Yet, as James Baldwin said of this history, “We carry it within us, are unconsciously controlled by it in many ways, and history is literally present in all that we do.”

Science provides validation of the problem of microaggressions: They are real, harmful and associated with racial bias, whether the perpetrator is aware of it or not. Improving awareness of this bias is hard but important work. If Americans want to advance toward a more racially just society, identifying effective ways to reduce microaggressions will be necessary, and this research is just beginning.The Conversation

Jonathan Kanter, Director of the Center for the Science of Social Connection, University of Washington

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone, Mr. Kanter says, “even in the best of circumstances, true self-awareness and behavior change are hard work.” That may even be an understatement. My own suspicion is that the worst offenders at microaggression are those in deep, deep denial of white privilege – and they are the last ones to want to change. No work is as hard as that work one doesn’t want to do. Please help us in any way you can, ladies, to get through to those who don’t want to.

The Furies and I will be back.

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  11 Responses to “Everyday Erinyes #233”

  1. Thanks Joanne–an excellent presentation on the harms, etc., related to implicit biases.  Harvard has expanded their implicit bias assessments to include more different elements and targets of racism along with adding disability, weight and age.  One can do their self assessments for free via https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/takeatest.html Since no one is free of bias, taking allows us to determine where we need to watch ourselves consciously if we value not displaying racism, ableism, ageism, sexism, etc.

  2. “If Americans want to advance toward a more racially just society, identifying effective ways to reduce microaggressions will be necessary, and this research is just beginning.”
    The big “IF!”  It is, sadly, apparent that too many Americans do not want to advance in that direction.  I will not get on my soapbox, now.
    A good find, Joanne, thanks.

  3. thank you.

  4. Recalling my medical school days (keep in mind I graduated in 1974 – before some of you were even born) and residency days, I can attest to incidents like this that I witnessed.  

    The fact that it was so overt and so common was very disheartening. 

    But I will say those subjected to “microaggressions” (and back then, they were more like MACROaggressions), handled them exceedingly well.  (Not all that surprising given the tenor of the time.)

    • I’ve always been impressed by the ability of people of color in particular to handle this sort of thing, as you say.  And equally impressed (negatively) at the INability of white people to see that if we were to determine superior ability based on these types of interaction alone, white people easily prove that black people are the superios “race.”

      (Of course there’s no such thing as a “race” let alone a “superior” one, but I’m sure you get my point.)

  5. An important and interesting article, Joanne. Thanks for posting it.

    Two points of (very personal) observation:

    Though psychological research into racial microaggression is important, I’m inclined to think that even more research is needed into how to minimise the outright racial macroaggression that seems to prevail in not only the US but in many other countries too, i.e. how to bring a culture change about.

    Not that those of us who think we are not as racist as all that shouldn’t be aware of the microaggression in our behavior towards black people. We should be and indeed we need to continue to strive to “true self-awareness and behavior change”.

    This brings me to my second observation.

    After reading ‘“I was just curious,” she’s not necessarily lying about her conscious intentions. She likely is unaware of the subtle racial bias that also influences her behavior. One can demonstrate racial bias and curiosity at the same time.’ and ‘Our research suggests that some microaggressions, such as asking “Where are you from?” or staying silent during a debate about racism, may be understood as small doses of racial bias, contaminating otherwise good intentions.’, I felt a certain amount of despair.

    I strive to be as self-aware as possible in the knowledge I’m as biased as the next person (not only racially) but I have asked a black girlfriend once to touch her hair when discussing hairdos and the trouble we had accepting the type of hair we had. Out of curiosity as far as I knew, but now I’m made to understand I may have been demonstrating racial bias. (She touched mine too, I should add.) I’m also left with the feeling that me trying to avoid mistakes and be more careful in my interactions with black people could be seen as “small doses of racial bias, contaminating otherwise good intentions”; as microaggression that is harmful.

    If I don’t know any better, the best thing to do would be not interacting with people of colour at all to avoid hurting them unintentionally. I know that is not the point you or Mr Kanter are trying to make, Joanne; avoidance would be the last thing a heterogeneous, multi-cultural but unified society needs, so I hope the Furies can help white people to interact with all people in a respectful way without having to walk on eggshells all the time.

    • I don’t think I’d worry about a request to touch hair when the person was someone well known to you and the whole discussion was about hair (and mutual.) (And even in the case of microaggression, asking has got to be better than just touching without asking, as so many people just touch a pregnant woman’s abdomen – shockingly to me.) But then I find myself constantly educating people not to touch someone’s (manual) wheelchair without permission, so I may be oveersensitive here.

  6. Definitely a great read.
    Thank you, Joanne. 

  7. The same type of microaggressive behavior is frequently leveled at prisoners and former prisoners.  It inspires feelings of hostility in my guys, and I can’t even imagine how much worse it is for Blacks, Latinos, Native Americans, and LQBTQ folks. 13

    • So true.  Age, weight, financial standing, and gender all come with bias as well, and I’m sure Ihat’s not an inclusive list.  It’s definitely time we humans outgrew being so tribal.  It no longer has actual survival value.

  8. JD, thanks for this. So much truth—-can’t remember the exact situation, but awhile back I asked a MAGA guy—–“Why be so insular? What does it do for you?”   At least he was silent!  Nicer response than the usual name-calling, slurs. LOL!   I have hope that most kids/young adults will be more inclusive,esp. if upcoming blue wave wipes out clown puppet & several GOP senators.   Hang in there, all.  A Change is coming soon.

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