Sociology Lecture 18: Racism and White Privilege
Frame 3: Biologization
*Color blind racism*: Inability to recognize white privilege and racism in society *Real racism*: blacks are biologically inferior to whites
Prejudice (Attitude) Can be both positive and negative
*Prejudgment*: an inflexible attitude about a particular group of people rooted in generalizations or stereotypes Learned through social interactions and outside factors.
White Privilege Society
1) White dominated 2) White identified 3) White centered 4) Oppressive of people of color
Racism
A set of beliefs about the superiority of one racial or ethnic group to justify inequality.
Minimization of Racism
Calling racism is seen as an excuse
Double Consciousness Embodied Identity in Race
Elements of identity generated through *other's perceptions* of our physical traits
Functionalist
Ethnocentric, all inclusion mandates exclusion, us vs. them
Institutional Discrimination
Ex. *Racial Steering* (realtors direct certain races towards or away from a certain area)
The Model Minority
Ex. Asians achieve educational, professional and socioeconomic despite being a minority in society.
Frame 1: Abstract Liberalism
Liberal ideas about equality are used to justify the racial status quo. Emphasis on individualism, meritocracy, post-racism.
Frame 2: Naturalization
Normalizing events or actions that are racist.
Individual Discrimination
One person treats another person unfairly because of race or ethnicity.
Colorism
One skin tone seen as superior within a racial group
Conflict Theorist Critical Race Theory
Racial differences create intergroup conflict
Discrimination (Action)
Unequal treatment of individuals based on their membership in a social group, usually motivated by prejudice.
Symbolic Interactionist
We actively create and recreate racial prejudice in our society