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An invitation to narrative practitioners
to address privilege and dominance
A document created from conversations between
Salome Raheim,
Cheryl White, David Denborough,
Charles Waldegrave,
Kiwi Tamasese, Flora Tuhaka,
Anita Franklin, Hugh Fox & Maggie Carey.
Click here for
photographs!
This document has been created by a group of therapists,
community workers and educators from Samoa, Aotearoa/New Zealand, Australia, USA
and the UK. What we have in common is a deep sadness at much of what is
occurring in the world and a commitment to play our part in continuing to foster
communities of therapists and community workers in which broader relations of
power are acknowledged and addressed in our work.
What we also have in common is that we have realised that we
have not been doing enough to bring these considerations of privilege and
dominance into our work. These are difficult topics and we are still finding our
way in relation to them.
We have tried to create this document so that it is relevant to
a wide range of practitioners. Obviously, your own context will influence how
you approach these writings and you may need to adapt some of the exercises that
are included here.
A number of the exercises that are included have been created
out of conversations about understanding white privilege. This is a key focus of
this document, but we also hope that these writings are relevant to looking at
other relations of power.
If you are a white person then you may decide to use these
writings to assist you to address white privilege; if you are heterosexual, you
may use these writings to address heterosexual dominance; if you are a man, you
may wish to focus on issues of gender; if you are highly educated and a
professional person you may wish to focus on matters of class and professional
privilege; if you are an able-bodied person you may wish to focus on matters of
disability and the politics of accessibility, and so on.
We hope these writings and the conversations that flow from them
may assist us to consider how we enact privilege in one realm or another. Over
time, we hope that they assist us to consider all the relations of power in
which we may be privileged.
These are not solely matters for us as individuals. In fact,
individualism is one of the forces that makes it so difficult to come together
to talk and address issues of privilege. We hope this document will act to link
people together around these issues, to contribute to conversations and the
building of ongoing relationships and communities to explore and face these
matters together. To assist this, and to reduce the chance of people reading
this document and feeling isolated in the experience, we strongly suggest that
you read this with someone else - a friend, family member or colleague - so that
you can begin conversations straight away!
We also recommend that prior to reading this document you
identify a ‘community’, ‘sphere of influence’ or ‘constituency’ that you will be
focusing on in relation to matters of privilege. This might be your workplace,
your local community, or a club or society in which you are a member. If you
keep this ‘community’, ‘sphere of influence’ or ‘constituency’ in mind as you
read this document, it may assist you in exploring the questions contained here.
It may also make it easier to imagine future conversations that you may wish to
initiate, and further steps to take.
We hope that the writings here will contribute to conversations
about these issues. We will be continually updating this document as it is a
work in progress – so we welcome your feedback and contributions!
Contents:
A note about the use
of the word ‘privilege’
An invitation to talk about privilege from Salome Raheim
Why is talking about privilege important?
Some of the restraints to talking about privilege
What sustains us in talking about privilege?
Identifying our own privileges
Focusing on white privilege
Developing knowledge and skills about recognising and
responding to our privilege
Responding to other therapists and community workers
Unpacking shame and guilt
Next steps
Some further reflections
Recent quotes
Looking forward to hearing from you
Updated
reflections on use of the project (September 2007)
A note about the use of the word
‘privilege’
In this document, the word ‘privilege’ is used in a particular way to
describe unearned rights, benefits, immunity and favours that are bestowed on
individuals and groups solely on the basis of their race, culture, religion,
gender, sexual orientation, physical ability or other key characteristic. The
use of the word ‘privilege’ in this way has different histories in different
local contexts. Here in Australia, it is a word that feminist women have used to
try to articulate the experience of male privilege in a patriarchal culture.
Similarly, Indigenous Australians have used the description of white privilege
to focus on the discrepancy of experience between white Australians and those
subject to racism, dispossession and colonisation. We encourage you to trace the
history of the use of the word in your own context. One of the most significant
reasons why we have chosen to use the word ‘privilege’ in this document is that
it places the focus on members of dominant groups (white people, men,
heterosexual people, able-bodied people, etc.) and our responsibilities to
address relations of power.
It is important to acknowledge that some of us experience
privilege in a wide range of domains (e.g. white, professional heterosexual men
experience privilege in relation to race, class, gender and sexual orientation),
while others may experience privilege in very few, if any, domains of life.
Responsibilities for addressing privilege are therefore not equal.
This document has been created for use by therapists and
community workers. Because of this, the following exercises assume that the
reader has some degree of privilege in some area of their life and work which
would be relevant to consider.
Throughout this document we have used personal examples and
invited the reader to consider how these issues are relevant in their own lives,
families, workplaces and local communities. We have done so because these issues
are personal: they influence and shape all our lives. However, relations of
power and privilege not only shape individual lives but also institutional
practices, economic structures, legal systems, professional knowledges, indeed
all realms of life. In no way do we wish to reduce considerations of
power and privilege to the realm of personal interaction and individual people’s
lives. We hope this document will spark conversations that assist us to make
links between our personal experiences and the experiences of others, and how we
can play our part deconstructing privilege in its many different forms.
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An invitation to
talk about privilege
from Salome Raheim
The relations and practices of power that influence our lives
are often invisible to us. If we do not proactively look at how relations of
power operate to create advantages for some and deny these advantages to others,
it hinders our work as therapists and community practitioners. Without examining
the operations of privilege, we are unable to see the circumstances that create
constraints on other people’s lives. We are unable to appreciate their daily
efforts to work and live in the context of these constraints, or to resist them.
Furthermore, we are unable to see how our lives are made easier.
We think that the ease with which we are able to operate in the world is the
norm and become oblivious to the fact that everybody’s life is not like our own.
What is more, unless we routinely examine the operations of
power and our place within these operations, we fail to notice how we are liable
to inadvertently impose our expectations, our cultural ways, our ways of
thinking, on the people with whom we work. These impositions tend to diminish
those who consult us, and they are destructive to the good work that we wish to
accomplish.
This examination and deconstruction of the operations of
privilege improves our practice as therapists and community workers. It is only
when we recognise what people are up against that we can notice and invite
people to richly describe their stories of resistance. It is only in examining
the operations of privilege that we can become more aware of the potential for
our practice to have negative consequences of inadvertently marginalising and
diminishing people’s lives and subordinating their stories.
This work has a particular resonance for those of us who are
from marginalised groups. Examining the operations of power and privilege,
renders visible the constraints upon our lives. It helps us to understand that
these constraints are not due to individual deficits, group deficits, or
cultural deficits. The problem is not located within us. This lessens the
influence of shame and makes resistance more possible
And so, we invite you to participate in this new project. Over
months we plan to place a range of writings on our website from practitioners
grappling with the following questions:
-
How does privilege influence our work as therapists and
community workers?
-
How can we notice the ways in which we inadvertently enact
privilege in our work?
-
How can we check out the effects of this?
-
How can we respond when this occurs?
-
How can we create processes of accountability to take care in
relation to these issues?
We welcome your participation in this project!
Please write to us with your responses to these questions. The
responses can relate to privilege in relation to culture, race, gender, class,
professional identity, sexual identity, gender identity, age, ability or any
other realm of privilege.
In the following pages, we have enclosed a range of exercises
that we hope will assist in exploring these issues further. We would be
delighted if you tried out these exercises and let us know how this goes. We
would appreciate your feedback.
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Why is talking about privilege important?
The following quotes have been drawn together from things that people have
said in workshops on this topic about why talking about privilege is important:
- As a woman therapist from a working-class background, until recently I had
not thought a lot about how I walk through life with white privilege and how
this influences my work. The turning- point was when a colleague, who is an
Indian woman, pointed out to me how much of my life is the way that it is
because I have white skin. She pointed out there is so much I do not have to
think about in raising my children, in speaking up in professional contexts,
in worrying how others might perceive me, etc. In realising this, I am now
asking different questions as a therapist. Questions that inquire as to the
skills and knowledges that people have developed in living in a racist world.
As a therapy team we are also seeking consultation around these issues and
trying to create changes to our practice so that we are more relevant to those
who consult us.
- As an African American professor, I live with the consequences of racism,
and yet there are also ways in which I am privileged. When I attended
parent-teacher conferences about my son who was in elementary school, I
recognised that my privilege as a highly educated person was at work. I knew
that if I put on my business suit and made sure that the teachers were aware
of my professional status, I would have automatic credibility in my parenting
role. The teachers would assume that I cared about my child and would respect
that my input about what was good for him was worth listening to. In contrast,
I realised that single women receiving public assistance who may not be
able to dress as well or ‘wear their degrees in front of them’ may not be
accorded the same credibility and respect. Their input is often not valued.
Sure, racism and white privilege disadvantage me in some situations.
Nevertheless, my privilege as a highly educated person accords benefits for me
that everyone should have, but everyone does not.
- Some years ago, my husband and I were having dinner with two gay male
friends. It was a very sad evening, as we had just learned that one of our
friends was dying of AIDS. We spoke at length about what this meant for both
of them and their relationship and then we decided that we would all go for a
walk down by the riverfront. I was close to tears at this stage and I went to
hold my husband’s hand. When I looked towards our friends, I saw them walking
with upright backs a slight distance apart. I realized that even then, after
the talk we had shared and all that they were going through, that they could
not hold hands in public for fear of others’ reactions. It was at that moment
that I realised the meaning of heterosexual dominance. And I have tried to
think about my privileges as a heterosexual person since then. Being able to
talk with others about these sorts of things has been important to me. It’s a
way of honouring my friends, both of whom are no longer alive now.
- In offering training to other therapists and community workers, it was
recently brought to my attention that, while the content of my teaching is
very aware of relations of power and diversity, actually my teaching methods
are not fully accessible to people with disabilities. I have taught about
these issues but hadn’t really considered my own privilege and lack of
attention in my own practice. For instance, the handouts I create are all in
small fonts which make them difficult for people with visual impairments to
read. And I have never taken the time to ensure that the articles I prescribe
in the training are available on tape. I am just now consulting with various
organisations to get some ideas as to what action I can take about this. This
is all due to the fact that others brought this to my attention. I now want to
get together with my colleagues to take some responsibility around these
issues.
- As a man, when I work with heterosexual couples there are numerous ways in
which male privilege can inadvertently influence my work. There are so many
dominant ideas in our culture that excuse men from responsibility in family
relationships and at the same time place the responsibility for the
maintenance of these relationships on women that, unless I am careful, I can
contribute to a woman’s perspective being marginalised. It is really only
through sharing tapes of my work with my colleagues (who are women and men)
and creating opportunities to thoroughly talk through how issues of gender
influence our therapeutic practice, that I can begin to notice and respond to
these issues. Thinking and talking about male privilege somehow puts the focus
back on all our lives as men. It means I’m not just focusing on the men with
whom I am working, but am also involved in conversations that explore how my
life and work is shaped by relations of gender.
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Some of the restraints to talking about privilege
Here are some of the conversational practices that people have identified
that get in the way of talking about privilege. It is our hope that, in listing
these examples here, it will assist us to notice when these practices enter
conversations and will assist us in creating alternative ways of talking about
privilege:
- Making things equivalent
Some of us live with much greater privilege than others. If a conversation
implies that the difficulties faced by those living with considerable
privilege are equivalent to those faced by those living with considerably less
privilege, then this can contribute to a mystification of power relations.
- Confusing experiences of individual hardship with
considerations of privilege
An individual’s experience of hardship may or may not have to do with
experiences of privilege. There are forms of hardship, such as loss, injury,
sickness, etc, that are a part of people’s lives with or without privilege.
Sometimes our experiences of individual hardship can obscure for us how we are
living with privilege in relation to race, gender, class, etc. One way to
think about this is to try to imagine what our individual experiences of
hardship would be like if we did not live with the privileges that we do.
- Dividing from others: ‘Somebody else is worse
at this than us'
In our experience, when we are invited to consider our own privilege it is
often much easier to focus instead on someone else’s bad behaviour – to say
that ‘they do this worse than us’. It seems that as members of dominant groups
we are very likely to divide from each other rather than talk about how we
enact privilege. For instance, when men are invited to look at gender
privilege they may be likely to point the finger at other men who display more
blatant sexist attitudes. Or white people when invited to look at white
privilege may divert the conversation to other people’s racist actions, and so
on.
- Avoiding talking about it: ‘Talking about this
issue is divisive’
Sometimes, we have heard very privileged people say that ‘talking about
privilege’ is divisive. This can be confusing. Some conversations about
privilege can be difficult because these are painful issues and have
real effects on people’s lives. But what is definitely divisive are the
systems of power that privilege some people over others. Not talking about
these issues doesn’t make the divisions go away. We are interested in finding
ways to talk about these issues that contribute to us being able to take
meaningful action.
- Talking isn’t enough: ‘All talk, no action’
Talking about these issues seems really important as it can be a first step in
building relationships and communities in which these issues can be addressed.
And yet, conversation alone is never going to be enough to address these
matters. Conversations around these issues need to lead to action, or to be
accompanied by action. These actions don’t necessarily need to be huge, but if
we can all find ways to contribute to meaningful and sustainable action on
these issues then talking about these matters will also become easier.
- Competition / Comparison
Competition can get in the way of these conversations. We can get caught up in
competing to ‘get it right’, or in competing that we have done it better, or
that others are more dominant than us. This can shut down meaningful
explorations of our own privilege.
- Changing the focus of the conversation: ‘It’s
class not race’ (or any other variation on this theme)
Another obstacle that sometimes appears in conversations involves changing the
focus of the conversation. Just when some attention is being brought to bear
on one relation of power and privilege (e.g. a black woman is naming issues of
race), a deflection may take place that moves the conversation towards another
relation of power (e.g. a white person might say ‘It’s not a matter of race
but of class’ or ‘It’s not race but gender’). While it is often important to
acknowledge various types of privilege and the links between them, for members
of dominant groups to try to pit one form of privilege against another can
shut down the possibilities for good conversation.
- Debating the terms of the discussion: ‘This isn’t
the right conversation to be having’
Sometimes, as members of dominant groups, rather than looking at our own
privilege, we are likely to debate the terms of the discussion. In this way,
the entire energy of the conversation is diverted into talking about whether
we should be talking about it…!
- Undermining the messenger: ‘I’m not sure if you
are doing this the right way’
When a facilitator invites a group to consider the issues of the participants’
own privilege, sometimes group members turn on the facilitator, criticise
their presentation style, or in other ways undermine their credibility. This
can be particularly true if a person of colour is inviting white people to
look at white privilege; or a gay or lesbian person is inviting a heterosexual
group to look at heterosexual dominance; or so on.
- Having to pretend you know
Sometimes in the professional world there is an unspoken assumption that we
are ‘meant to know’ all about these sorts of issues. If we feel as if we have
to pretend to know more than we do, then this can get in the way of good
conversation.
- Shame, guilt, sadness
While there is a valid place for shame, guilt and sadness (see exercise
below), if individuals from dominant groups begin to centre our expression of
shame, guilt and/or sadness then this can greatly reduce the possibilities for
meaningful conversation.
- A lack of awareness of the effects of the
conversation on other people in the discussion
Talking about issues of power and privilege in groups can be complicated when
there are people from different cultural groups in the room and/or people who
may be privileged in some realms while others are marginalised. Finding ways
to remain aware of the effects of the conversation on everybody in the room
seems vital.
- Individualism: ‘I’m not connected to this’
Trying to think about privilege in relation to issues of gender, race and
culture, etc, involves considering ourselves as members of certain dominant
groups (white people, heterosexual people, professionals, able-bodied, men,
etc). But this can be complicated if we are not used to thinking about
ourselves in this way. If we are only used to considering ourselves as
individuals (as is common within western culture), it can be difficult to
realise that we are part of broader collective groups and that we therefore
have broader responsibilities.
- Heroic accounts
In talking about privilege, sometimes it can be tempting to tell stories
that put us in a good light – the times we have responded to other people’s
bad behaviour; the friends that we have from marginalised groups; the
sacrifices we make to look at these issues. And yet, retelling these sorts of
stories can make it more difficult to look at the mistakes we may still be
making, the things we overlook. Often talking about our mistakes, what we are
not so good at, can open space for more constructive conversations.
- Obscuring personal prejudice with relations of
power and privilege
Whereas everyone has personal prejudices, things that they like and don’t
like, this is very different from broader operations of power and privilege.
Whereas an individual woman may for whatever reason have a personal dislike of
all men, or a person of colour may have rage that is sometimes directed at
white people in general, this is not equivalent to sexism or racism. Sexism,
racism and other relations of power and privilege shape institutional
practices, economic structures, legal systems, family relations and all other
realms of life. While anybody can be prejudiced, that doesn’t mean that their
prejudice is supported by broader institutions and discriminatory discourses.
It also doesn’t mean that they are privileged by the colour of their skin,
gender, sexual orientation, or so on.
This list above is not complete, it is just offered as a
starting point for discussion. If you and your colleagues can think of any other
restraints to talking about privilege we’d love to hear from you about this.
Interestingly, in any conversation, some people may identify
that some of these restraints are in operation while other people may have very
different views of what is happening.
Sometimes talking about the restraints first can then make it
easier to have a good conversation about our own privilege and dominance.
Here are a few questions that we have found helpful to consider.
If possible, we suggest you share the above list of restraints with a friend,
colleague or family member and then work through the following questions:
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Are any of these above restraints relevant in your situation?
If so, which ones?
-
Have you slipped into some of these practices at times in the
past? If so, which ones?
-
If so, what would contribute to you being able to resist doing
so next time?
-
What do you think is the most likely restraint to you
thoroughly identifying the ways in which privilege and dominance act in your
work and life?
We would appreciate hearing from you about your experience of
considering these questions. Thanks!
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What sustains us in talking
about privilege?
These issues can be complex. They involve facing and coming to
terms with injustices and hardships in people’s lives. They also involve
conversations across difference. This can sometimes be difficult and even
painful. On the other hand, joining with others and making a contribution to
addressing these issues is one of the most rewarding and meaningful aspects of
our lives. The following exercise seeks to open space to consider what sustains
us in looking at these issues. If possible, we suggest you find someone whom you
trust and use these questions as a guide to interview each other:
- Why are you interested in exploring these issues related to privilege?
- Is your interest connected to any particular hopes for your work, for your
life, for the world in which we live?
- If so, what would you call this hope?
- What is the history of this hope?
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Identifying our own privileges
It can sometimes be difficult to begin to identify how our lives
are shaped by privilege: especially when we may be struggling with various
hardships of our own. It can also be confronting to come to terms with how
differently we experience life from one another. Our experiences of school,
family, work, play, loss and life are so powerfully influenced by race, culture,
gender, sexual identity and material privilege (and other relations of power).
The following exercise invites us to try to speculate as to how
our lives are different from the lives of others due to the privilege with which
we live. Of course, we cannot really know about the experiences of other people
unless we hear from them directly. As you try to respond to the questions below,
if you get stuck and cannot think of how your life experience may differ from
the lives of others, then perhaps there are some further steps that can be
taken. On whichever question you get stuck, perhaps it may be possible to
consult with an appropriate person so that you can come to learn more about the
operations of that particular form of privilege. This exercise can be done in
small groups. Whether each of these questions are relevant to you will depend
upon your gender, race, sexual identity, ability, etc. Please just answer the
questions that are relevant to you.
- How might your experience as a white person differ from the experience of
a person of colour in:
- applying for a job?
- passing police on the street?
- preparing your child to go to school for the first time?
How might your experience as a heterosexual person differ from the
experience of a queer person in:
- expressing affection, love and comfort in public?
- preparing to introduce your partner to your family of origin?
- seeking counseling for assistance in your couple relationship?
How might your experience as a non-Indigenous person differ from the
experience of an Indigenous person in:
- seeking assistance from welfare workers or social workers?
- attending a workshop on grief?
- reading a book or seeing a film about the history of the country in
which you live?
- planning what you will do when you retire?
How might your experience as a professional wage-earner differ from the
experience of an unemployed person in:
- attending a parent-teacher night?
- seeking assistance from a therapist?
- attending a school reunion?
How might your experience as an able-bodied person differ from the
experience of a person with a disability in:
- getting yourself to work each day?
- negotiating where the annual work dinner is to be held?
- how people interpret any expression of anger or frustration?
At this time, how might your experience as a non-Arab person differ from
the experience of a Arab person in:
- attending high school?
- getting on a plane to travel to a professional conference ?
- seeking assistance in a hospital emergency ward?
How might your experience as a male therapist differ from the experience
of a woman therapist in:
- running therapeutic groups in a men’s prison?
- working with women survivors of sexual abuse?
- working with heterosexual couples?
Other domains of privilege: We
encourage you to adapt this exercise so that it is most relevant to you. Perhaps
in your context it is most relevant to consider privilege related to language,
religion or national differences. For instance, if you are a Christian in a
predominantly Christian country and you are working with Muslim families or
Jewish families, the key issue may relate to the implications of long histories
of religious-based persecution. If you are working with refugee populations, the
key issues may relate to citizenship rights. Alternatively, if you are a gay man
or a lesbian woman working with transgender and bi-gender people, you may be
needing to think through matters of privilege related to gender identity.
If this exercise needs adapting in order to be relevant in your
particular context, please make the changes required and then let us know how
you have done this. We’d appreciate the feedback! Thanks.
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Focusing on white privilege
The following two exercises are specifically designed to address
matters of race and cultural privilege. They are specifically for people from
dominant cultural groups.
(i) The values of our ancestors
This exercise was originally developed by the Just Therapy Team,
from The Family Centre in Wellington, New Zealand. It was specifically created
for Pakehas (New Zealanders of European descent) to explore the values that
their ancestors brought with them to New Zealand, and to open space to consider
how these values continue to influence Maori (the Indigenous people of New
Zealand). It is designed to encourage appreciation of the best qualities of
Pakeha identity and values, while at the same time enabling a critique of Pakeha
dominance. It has been used mostly with Pakehas, however, on a few occasions
Maori people who also have Pakeha heritage have deliberately engaged with this
exercise and these people have said that they appreciated the conversations that
were crafted.
The exercise has been slightly altered for this context.
- Please name one of your ancestors who came to New Zealand as settlers
(whether this is someone of your parent’s generation, or grandparent’s or
great-grandparent’s generation, etc)
- Please think of the sorts of values that they brought to this land and
name these.
- What were they looking for in this land, what were their hopes?
- Which of the values that you have identified are you proud of, and would
you want to continue for yourself and pass on to your children? Why?
- Which of these values do you not wish to continue? Why?
- Why was it, do you think, that many of the values brought by settlers
subjugated the values of the Indigenous people of this land?
- What do we need to do now to ensure that values of ‘settlers’ do not
continue to subjugate the values of the Indigenous people of this land?
- What do we need to do to ensure that our work and workplaces respect the
values of the different cultural groups who seek consultation? (These
different cultural groups include the indigenous people with their particular
relationship to the land and the settler groups.)
- What processes might we need to put in place to ensure that we do not
privilege one cultural way of being, and one cultural way of healing, over
others?
We will be interested to hear from people about ways of adapting this
exercise for different contexts. Hugh Fox from the Centre for Narrative Practice
in Manchester, UK, is currently working on a version that would be appropriate
for the English context.
(ii) Appreciating cultures
We are interested in how we can develop an appreciation for
particular cultural practices: both those of our own cultures and those of other
people’s. This exercise has been created with this in mind. We look forward to
hearing from you about your experience of considering these questions:
- What are the things you treasure and appreciate about your own cultural
heritage?
- Why is this important to you?
- What are some of the things that you treasure and appreciate about others’
cultural heritage?
- Why is this important to you?
- How do practices from your own cultural heritage influence your work?
- How does your appreciation for particular practices of other cultures
influence your work? Are there things that you have learned from your
relationships with people from other cultures that now influence your work
practices?
- How can we ensure that our appreciation of our own cultural heritage
enhances rather than reduces our appreciation of the cultural heritage of
others?
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Developing knowledge and skills
about recognising and responding to our privilege
In talking with others, we have come to understand that there
are a number of different categories of knowledge and skills that we need to
develop in relation to our privilege. We have tried to list some of these
different categories below. We have then repeated the questions with an example
of someone responding to the exercise.
The different categories of knowledge about our privilege include:
- Knowledge about different forms of privilege in our own lives and in our
workplace: How are our lives and work practices shaped by privilege in
relation to gender, class, race, culture, sexual identity, age, ability, etc?
Knowledge of the ways in which we enact privilege: How do we enact
privilege in our personal relationships, in our workplace, in our counselling
and/or community work?
Knowledges and skills related to noticing when we are enacting privilege:
when are we most likely to enact privilege? In what sort of circumstances? How
can we tell when we are enacting privilege?
Knowledges and skills in noticing when others are trying to let you know
that you have enacted privilege: What do we listen for? What makes it more
likely for people to be able to tell us?
Skills in how to respond to situations when we have enacted privilege: How
can we develop skills in acts of genuine apology and redress? How can we
develop ways of learning from mistakes? How can we create structures and
processes to ensure learnings are carried into the future?
An example of a response:
We hope that the following example makes it easier to think
through how these matters might apply to your life and work. The example we
offer here relates to a white person considering the different forms of
knowledge they are trying to generate about white privilege, but we could just
as well have included an example of a heterosexual person thinking about
heterosexual dominance, or a man thinking about issues of gender, and so on.
-
Knowledge about different forms of privilege in our own lives
and in our workplace: How are our lives and work practices shaped by privilege
in relation to gender, class, race, culture, sexual identity, age, ability,
etc?
I am a social worker and the very profession that I am a
part of has played an extensive role in the subjugation, dispossession and
marginalisation of indigenous peoples and people of colour. We don’t have to
dig very deep or look back very far to find explicitly racist assumptions in
our ‘canons’ of knowledge. Our concepts of what it means to be ‘human’, what
it means to be an individual of moral worth, our concepts of intelligence, our
concepts of ‘self-actualisation’, our concepts of the proper relation of
individuals to the collective, are all deeply bound up with our history of
racism. As a white social worker working with people who have recently
migrated here I think I need to look very closely at the effects of applying
these concepts to people of other cultures in my professional work.
Knowledge of the ways in which we enact privilege: How do we enact
privilege in our personal relationships, in our workplace, in our counselling
and/or community work?
In my consultations with people from different
cultures, I routinely forget that the ways of communicating I take for granted
may not have the same meaning for them. For instance, within many indigenous
cultures there are different understandings in relation to not making eye
contact when talking about significant issues; or realising that some things
are not to be talked about between men and women; or not mentioning the name
of a person who has recently died. There are also different appreciations for
periods of silence in communication. But I forget all these things and I know
that I have made people feel really uncomfortable at times. I know that our
workplace really values western ways of communicating and this means it is
less accessible to people of different cultures.
There are also times when I inadvertently assume that people from different
cultures can or ought to relate to the world similarly to the ways I do! For
instance, I assume they can answer questions about what they might want from a
situation, whereas for them such considerations involve taking into account
many differing relationships. Or I assume that they ought to want the same
things out of life that I do. Some of the programs, such as our parenting
programs, can also depict that there is a ‘correct’ way to parent, and
inevitably this ‘correct way’ looks very similar to a particular white,
middle-class way of relating.
Knowledges and skills related to noticing when we are enacting privilege:
When are we most likely to enact privilege? In what sort of circumstances? How
can we tell when we are enacting privilege?
I find that I am most vulnerable to enacting
privilege when I am rushed, when I am certain about things, and when I haven’t
created opportunities for feedback on my work. As a man, I can find myself
taking individual action, forging ahead and just trying to get something done,
and it’s in these times that I generally mess up on the process! I guess they
are some of my ‘risk’ factors.
Knowledges and skills in noticing when others are trying to let you know
that you have enacted privilege: What do we listen for? What makes it more
likely for people to be able to tell us?
This can be complicated. While I have tried to set up
structures so that I can hear direct feedback on my work, there are still many
situations in which I need to be alert to clues as to when I may have
replicated dominance. For instance, if I find that I am doing all the talking
and others are now being quiet, or if people stop turning up to meetings, then
it’s often a sign that I need to review what I have been doing. It’s also a
sign for me to have some conversations with other people: both colleagues,
friends and consultants, to think through what has been going on.
Skills in how to respond to situations when we have enacted
privilege: How can we develop skills in acts of genuine apology and redress?
How can we develop ways of learning from mistakes? How can we create
structures and processes to ensure learnings are carried into the future?
When it is pointed out to me that I have been thoughtless, or inadvertently
racist, I always talk with others about what would be the best ways forward.
These aren’t situations that I am good at handling on my own. Initially I can
feel ashamed and a good conversation with my colleagues often assists in
making a plan of action. We try and work out exactly what assumptions we have
made and how it is that we have been thoughtless. Sometimes we write a letter
of apology and spell out what steps we are taking to redress the situation.
Other times talking directly with those concerned works best. Sometimes the
best way forward is simply to change the ways we are working, and it isn’t
until later that a verbal acknowledgement takes place. Every situation is
different, but ensuring I am not alone in the process is very important for
me.
These different forms of knowledge are in some ways highly
personal. They are different for all of us. And the contexts of our work will
obviously affect the sorts of issues we most urgently need to address.
The best way that we have found for these different types of
knowledge to be generated is through discussion and reflection with people who
we trust. We suggest that you read through the above list with a friend or
colleague and take it in turns to talk about each of these different categories
and how they apply to your life and work. We suggest you do this in relation to
race, gender, sexual orientation, ability, professional privilege, etc
(whichever realms in which you experience privilege).
Exploring the history of this knowledge:
It can also be illuminating to share stories about the history of how you
have acquired these different forms of knowledge on particular issues. For
instance, if you are a man:
- How, where and from whom did you learn about how male privilege shapes
your life?
- How, where and from whom did you learn about the ways you inadvertently
enact male privilege?
- How, where and from whom did you come to learn to notice this?
- How, where and from whom did you learn to notice when women are trying to
point out to you that you are enacting male privilege?
- How, where and from whom have you learned to respond to these situations?
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Responding to other therapists and community workers
Part of developing a consciousness of our privilege and how we belong to
certain dominant groups involves thinking through how we respond in our
professional networks to others like us who replicate privilege. For instance,
how do we respond as men when another man makes a sexist remark; or as white
people when something racist is spoken, or as able-bodied people when a
thoughtless act results in a training session being inaccessible to people with
disabilities? These can be complex matters. While there can be times when we
simply must respond in whatever way we can in order to interrupt harassment and
hostility, there are other times (when talking with colleagues, friends, family
members who may be replicating dominance through ignorance rather than intent)
that it can be important for us to find ways of raising issues that are not
self-righteous and that somehow acknowledge that we sometimes make similar
mistakes. The following questions are offered in the hope that they will assist
teasing out some of the complexities involved in responding to situations in our
workplaces and other professional contexts in which others like us may be
replicating dominance.
If you see a member of your own social grouping replicating dominance
(e.g. if you are a heterosexual person and you hear another heterosexual
person speak in homophobic ways), what is your immediate response? What do you
feel? What do you think? What images are evoked for you?
- How would you most like to respond in such situations? What principles
would you like to inform your responses?
- In these situations, what might be the forces at play that encourage us
not to say anything, not to ‘rock the boat’? What are the forces at play that
discourage us from raising issues of dominance with our own?
- If it is possible in the circumstances, how could you respond in a way
that made it clear that you do not agree with such statements without adopting
a position of one-up critique? What would you need to do in your response that
would acknowledge that in some respect we are in this together?
- Are there ways of talking with colleagues and friends about these issues,
ahead of time, so that together you can try to explore ways of responding to
these situations? If so, how could you go about setting up such a
conversation?
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Unpacking shame and guilt
When people first begin to look at issues of privilege this is sometimes
accompanied by experiences of shame, guilt and/or sadness. We believe it can be
significant to think thoroughly about the meaning of these experiences so that
shame and guilt do not paralyse us from taking responsibility to address issues
of privilege. Here are some questions that we have found helpful to consider:
- What is it that you are feeling ashamed, guilty and/or sad about?
- Often when someone feels shame and/or guilt, this shame and guilt
represents certain values that you feel you have let down, that you have
strayed from. What values do you think you have strayed from?
- Why are these values significant to you?
- What is their history?
- Are there other people you know who share these values, and/or who would
respect these values that you hold?
- If so, is there some way of initiating a conversation with these
significant others about how these values could possibly shape a response to
your new learnings around these issues? Is there some way that these values
could assist in shaping a collective response in your family, friendship
network, workplace etc?
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Next steps
Reflecting upon and responding to considerations of privilege and dominance
is an ongoing, life-long process. As these issues are so much broader than our
own individual lives, there is no way that we can hope to ‘resolve’ them. We can
however join with others and keep taking steps in thinking about and responding
to these issues. The following questions are offered as a guide to assist in
working out next steps in our work and in our broader lives to try to address
issues of privilege:
- What will be the next steps of learning more about matters of power and
privilege?
- What will be the next steps of considering how relations of privilege
influence your work?
- What resources will you dedicate to these issues?
- Joining with others with similar hopes and values can make an enormous
difference. Who will you be linked with in these next steps?
- How will these relationships sustain your next steps?
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Some further reflections
To end, we have included here some quotes from people talking about what they
have found helpful in considering their own privilege. We look forward to adding
your quotes in here too.
- Relations of power and privilege shape institutional practices, economic
structures, legal systems, family relations, the theories of family life we
studied, the ways in which we interact with people in the waiting room, indeed
all realms of life. I have found it necessary to think through where
and how I ought to focus my energies in responding. I have decided to start
with my own practice and the ways in which I may be inadvertently contributing
to the marginalisation of others. A small group of workers at our agency is
also looking at the broader question of how we distribute the physical
resources as well as our time and energy in our workplace. Is our agency
accessible and relevant to those groups of our local community that are
economically marginalised? If not, who might we consult in the local community
to assist in changing this? We also wish to think about how, as a workplace,
we might start to make more of a contribution towards enabling the voices of
those with whom we work to influence decisions in our local area. This is how
we are starting to try to address these issues. There are openings at all
these different levels.
- Once in a workshop around issues of racism, I asked a question about how
as a white woman I could learn more about these matters and my
responsibilities. The facilitator of the group asked me a question in return.
She said, ‘How do you normally go about finding out about things you do not
know?’. This was really helpful to me. My favoured way of learning things is
to do so with others. So I approached my sister and asked if she would be
interested in joining with me in this process. Together we then talked about
the skills and experiences we do have in seeking out knowledge, in talking
with people, in reading books, watching films, in seeking out relevant
training programs. I know that I learn best from conversations so it made us
think about how we could build relationships in which we could keep talking
about these issues. This is not the first area in which we have needed to
learn about the world anew. The facilitator’s question helped me to think
about how it’s our responsibility to seek out more information and learning in
this realm.
- Quite simply, to address these issues will involve a commitment of
resources – including financial resources. There’s nothing mysterious about
this. We may need to employ consultants to offer feedback on the work that we
do. We may need to pay the airfares and accommodation of a colleague from a
marginalised group to present with us at the next conference we attend. We
might need to offer scholarships to people from marginalised groups. We might
need to work an extra day a week to educate ourselves on these matters or to
volunteer at an agency addressing these matters. If we are holding an event we
may need to go out and consult with a range of community members to find out
what would make this relevant to people from marginalised groups. These acts
involve time and work and financial resources. There’s nothing too complicated
about this. It’s a matter of making a commitment and doing it. This is true
for us as individuals, as groups, as workplaces, and as local communities. We
can all make these decisions and therefore make some contribution.
- I once believed that the only way I could understand other people’s
experiences of marginalisation was if I focused on those elements of my own
experience in which I have felt marginalised. Although this can be helpful for
some people, I’ve discovered recently that actually it is through
understanding more about my own privilege that has opened possibilities for me
to recognise other’s experiences. Realising what I don’t know has meant that I
am trying, with my colleagues, to create relationships of partnership – in
which I can get regular feedback about my practice. I need this feedback. I
need relationships that are sturdy and equitable enough for me to get to hear
tough feedback about how I am going. I know I am going to keep making the
occasional blunder. I see it as progress now that I get to hear about these
blunders more often…! And I am getting better at responding to them. I don’t
seem to be making the same mistakes over again. It’s just that there are
things I don’t see. What I do see, is that it is only through regular
consultations with people from marginalised groups, it is only through these
relationships of partnership, that I can hope to keep my practice relevant and
engaged with these issues. These relationships are my antidote to complacency.
- It was only when a gay couple came to our workplace to seek counselling
that I realised that in the waiting room all the images and pictures are of
heterosexual families. Even the logo of our organisation clearly depicts a
man, a woman and child. Inadvertently, I realise now that these images clearly
welcome some people more than others.
- It has come as something of a shock to me to realise that the expert
knowledges which I have been trained in may not only be unhelpful in trying to
interact with people of other cultures, they may also be disrespectful and
even damaging. I have been trained to believe that ‘knowledge’ is what appears
in books and in journals and in university curricula. The more I try to
deconstruct professional privilege, the more I come to see that there are
other forms of knowledge too: insider knowledges, knowledge about culture or
gender or sexual identity. As a professional person I am meeting with
colleagues now about how to ensure that we create space for these sorts of
insider knowledges to be a part of our counselling conversations. That’s a big
change.
- These considerations are very relevant to my everyday conversations with
people. For example, I meet with people who describe to me how conditions of
poverty have put them in the clutches of loneliness. And loneliness (plus
forces of sexism, racism, etc) leaves them vulnerable to self-hate. It seems
very important that I find ways to acknowledge that these life experiences are
largely the result of broader inequities, broader social injustices and, at
the same time, find avenues in conversation to acknowledge the unique
outcomes, the ways in which people are staying true to their own values, and
together trace alternative story-lines that will alleviate the sense of
failure that is often the outcome of these injustices. I do not have answers
to these matters, but I certainly know that I want to be talking with others
about this.
- The biggest single thing that has assisted me in looking at these issues
is that we have developed collective processes in our workplace. I don’t ever
have to think that it’s just up to me to understand an issue. We have set up
ways of asking for and receiving feedback collectively – so that members of
the less powerful group can make challenges or criticisms with a collective
voice, which is less personally risky than doing it as an individual. Also,
members of the dominant group can hear the challenges or criticisms as a
group, take care of each other in the process, and take collective
responsibility for making sense of them and addressing them. I can honestly
say that I am not up to dealing with the complexities of these issues on my
own, but I can make a contribution to a collective process. This is what works
for me.
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Recent quotes in response
to an initial draft:
- I have found it helpful to try to develop a definition of what it is that
we are aiming for in doing this work. For me, I have realised that I am aiming
for the creation of a ‘Diverse Community of Caring’. This is my working
definition: A diverse community of caring results from a group of diverse
people (based on race, ethnicity, class, gender, sexual orientation, age,
national origin, geographical origin, language and spiritual values, etc.)
coming together in honest discussion and love to ensure that the concerns of
all members are expressed and validated, and that consideration of these
unique perspectives are reflected in the allocation of power and resources
within the community. This is my vision for the world.
(Vanessa Jackson, USA)
- Where I have done most work specifically on issues on privilege and
dominance is on the relationships between the different professions in health
care, and how the struggle for dominance, especially by doctors and my own
profession, psychologists, have negative effects for our clients. One example
is that in order to stay in a dominant position, some psychologists seems to
define psychotherapy in a very rigid and ‘thin’ manner. To bring forth
psychotherapy in this manner has a tendency in my experience to marginalise
clients, for instance young people who are ‘acting out’ (as they are labeled),
and also other professions like social workers, nurses and others. Unpacking
these views on therapy very often lead me to see questions of privilege and
dominance as the ‘driving force’ rather than the wellbeing of clients. I am
interested in finding ways to talk about these matters. (Rolf Sundet, Norway)
- I have found it helpful to consider what will be different in my life if I
commit myself more to addressing issues of privilege in my work, my life, my
community. And also to think more about what is the impact of my behaviour
(passive or active) on people who are marginalised. How does their status,
their dreams, possibilities and externally imposed limitations affect my life?
How would my life change (if at all) if these barriers were removed? How are
our hopes and dreams similar? How are our fears similar? What are commitments
I can make personally and professionally to foster more equality? To whom will
I be accountable for the changes I pledge to make? These are questions I
continue to ask myself and I find them helpful companions on the journey.
(Vanessa Jackson, USA)
- I think there are some very powerful values within dominant culture that
are being transgressed by these conversations. Dominance and privilege are
maintained by a refusal to recognise their existence, and are undermined by
naming them and exploring the ways in which they operate. This is a major
reason why "political correctness" has been so strongly attacked over the last
10-15 years by conservative academics and media commentators. We are now
living in a context of conservative triumphalism, where any self-examination
over issues of privilege is inevitably dismissed and ridiculed. In this
context it is not surprising that these conversations can initially feel
somewhat unnatural or forced, and make people feel uneasy. There is nothing in
the dominant culture which is encouraging us to have these conversations, and
there is a great deal that is telling us that if we do we are being "goody two
shoes", self-righteous, pompous, irrelevant and in danger of looking
ridiculous. Unless the transgressive nature of these conversations is named,
people are likely to believe that their discomfort is their own personal
"problem", or that there is indeed something "wrong" with the conversations
themselves. Indeed, I think people should be encouraged to see that there is
an element of courage involved in having these conversations in the present
political climate, and to feel excited about the possibilities that can come
from them. I see conversations about privilege as having profoundly exciting
and expansive possibilities. They enable us to explore the ways in which we
are limiting ourselves and being limited by our social contexts. They enable
us to explore our own preferred stories about who we are and who we want to be
in the world. They enable us to expand our horizons of where we belong and who
we can connect with and stand with. In fact, they enable us to live in this
world with our eyes open, not shut. As far as I am concerned, this is
something to celebrate, not be afraid of. (Chris McLean, Australia)
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Looking forward to hearing from you…
This is an ongoing project and we are all very much still
learning about the best ways to explore and talk about these issues. We will be
updating this document in response to feedback and also adding new stories and
reflections as people send these to us. We would like to hear from you about
your experience of engaging with these exercises, what they evoked for you, etc.
And we’d also be interested to hear of any ways in which you have adapted the
exercises to make them more relevant to your own context. What is more, we would
welcome your ideas about specific exercises to deconstruct any of the particular
forms of privilege referred to in this document (e.g. gender, heterosexual
dominance, professional privilege, class, white privilege, ability etc). We
would also welcome ideas about ways of addressing other issues that we did not
address in any detail here, such as gender identity, religion, etc.
We look forward to hearing from you!
Updated reflections on the use of
this project
From: Peter
Read
Sep 2007
Subject: PRIVILEGE PROJECT
I've just read your pages on the Privilege Project. I'm thinking about how I can
go about analysing my practice with the help of a colleague. However, one of the
areas of practice that I thought about in the context of my work was how I and
my colleagues and my profession often using the concept of boundaries to protect
privilege. I work in mental health with marginalised people struggling with the
dual diagnoses of serious mental illness and substance abuse. There are
boundaries that I can invoke about not telling people too much about my own
life, though I try not to use them. Recently a young woman asked me a lot of
personal questions: Age, marital status, children etc. When I had answered them,
I said "You ask a lot of questions, don't you." She replied "So do you". There
are boundaries imposed by the organisation, the team, or legislation that I can
use to back away from helping persons who don't fit the criteria for my
assistance, or who need help with issues I don't work with. The struggle is to
network better with other support workers who work on or around the boundaries
of my job.
PETER READ
Social Worker
Melbourne
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