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Gerald Torres
Abstracted from: Gerald Torres, Understanding
Patriarchy as an Expression of Whiteness: Insights from
The Chicana Movement , Washington University Journal of Law and
Policy 129-172, 129-130 (2005) (233 Footnotes omitted)
One of the arguments that Professor Guinier and I make in The
Miner's Canary is that whiteness is a social and political category
that groups (or individuals) inhabit. Whiteness is measured by
distance from blackness. While this may seem like a binary
construction, it is instead better understood as a continuum based
on the historical structure of race management in the United States.
As such it is both an ascriptive and descriptive category. As a
descriptive category, it can be adopted by individuals even if that
identity is at odds with the larger social category applied to their
group. For example, an individual member of an ethnic group like
Mexican-American or Cuban-American might think of and even publicly
identify his or herself as "white," even though he or she is
"Hispanic" or "Latino," broadly considered to be non-white. There
are several phenomena at work here--not just self-description, but
also the experience of an "other" description. That is, one might be
"white," "Hispanic," and "non-white" all at the same time, but is
rarely called on to enact the social meaning of each of those
categories at once. Because of this, the political dimension of race
becomes one of its most salient attributes.
Race, of course, is but one aspect of the self or of political or
social categorization. Class and gender relations (in addition to
other considerations) also combine to structure social relations and
individual consciousness. One of the questions that feminists like
Catharine MacKinnon and Marylyn Frye asked early on was whether
patriarchy has a color. This is not as simple or as odd a question
as it might first appear. What this question asks is whether the
pattern of racial management is structurally similar to or part of
the system of gender management, and vice versa.
This paper examines this question through the lens of the early
Chicano movement and the emergence of Chicana feminism, with its
resistance to patriarchy as well as to white supremacy. Chicana
feminism, both in its later form, but more importantly in its
nascent or inchoate form, represented a challenge to the racial
politics of the Chicano movement. This confrontation emerged through
a resistance to the sexual roles that developed during this period. |