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In Short

So You Think You’re Not a White Feminist?

Women's march
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After the Oct. 31 SoHo truck , Lauren Duca, the author of the most-read 2016 Teen Vogue article 鈥,鈥 was roundly criticized on Twitter for presenting her rejection of bigotry as. When Muslim and Arab residents that painting New York as an idealistic utopia of acceptance erased their actual lived experiences with prejudice in the city, Duca responded dismissively, telling people who took her statement out of context to 鈥.鈥

Duca is hardly the first progressive white woman to act this way, and she, arguably, isn鈥檛 even the most egregious one. More recently, Lena Dunham鈥檚 defense of her friend, former Girls writer Murray Miller, who allegedly raped a woman of color, the actress Aurora Perrineau, in 2012, that her feminism is often exclusively for women who look like her. And yet, white women .

Too often, white people鈥攁nd in this case, I鈥檓 speaking explicitly to white women who identify as progressives鈥攍abel ourselves 鈥渨oke,鈥 鈥渁llies,鈥 and 鈥渋ntersectional feminists,鈥 and then call it a day. We assume that with these labels, whether we bestow them on ourselves (more on that later) or others bestow them on us, we know the correct things to say and the correct ways to say them. We cloak ourselves in those words, and use them as a comfortable shield from criticism and accountability. Put another way, we stop trying to be better鈥攕top trying to earn the trust of the more marginalized communities around us.

We become, in a word, stagnant.

Progressive white women may be stagnant because we might not think it鈥檚 our place to speak on certain issues. One area in which we have a desperate blind spot, however, is holding our fellow white women accountable for their advocacy failings, and calling them into a deeper conversation about the reality that womanhood is lived and navigated in different ways for different women. We, instead, leave this task to people of color.

From a quick look at how media outlets have covered the role of white women in the recent Virginia gubernatorial election, it seems that the authors鈥攊n publications from , to , to 鈥攖rying most doggedly to reach the who voted for Republican politician Ed Gillespie, were all people of color. Of course, this isn鈥檛 to devalue these writers鈥 work, because that work is necessary and important, but it also shouldn鈥檛 be their burden, or at least certainly not their burden alone. Why aren鈥檛 white women more vocal about the injustices in our own communities? Too frequently, we leave that job to people of color, and women of color in particular. And, in turn, our inability鈥攐r, worse, unwillingness鈥攖o use the privilege we have to educate and assist becomes moral negligence.

But the issue goes deeper still. Many white women also repeatedly fail to support women of color, even when we鈥檙e supposedly progressive champions in other arenas. The launch of Wonder Woman, for instance, was lauded by the public as a feminist triumph, largely because of its star, Gal Gadot. The actress staunchly proclaimed, in an, 鈥淓very woman, every man, everyone should be a feminist. Because whoever is not a feminist is a sexist.鈥 She鈥檚 also, refusing to sign for a Wonder Woman sequel unless director Brett Ratner, accused of sexual assault, is removed from the franchise. In short, Gadot knows how to be an ally, particularly to those who look like her. But to take her logic a step farther, everyone who isn鈥檛 actively an intersectional feminist is tacitly supporting the oppression of women of color. And, the Wonder Woman franchise hasn鈥檛 yet become an intersectional,. The issues Gadot and white allies like her have chosen to stay silent about speak critically to their priorities.

The crux of the problem is that white women who label themselves 鈥減rogressive allies鈥 forget that ally-ship isn鈥檛 a state of being; it鈥檚 a constant practice. It鈥檚 the practice of questioning, rigorously and routinely, how our position vis-脿-vis others might privilege us鈥攖he ways we might place whiteness above womanhood.

So, what might truly progressive ally-ship look like?

For one, it requires total honesty with ourselves, regardless of whether serious introspection reveals that we鈥檝e been stagnant allies. We may be comfortable with our mild contributions but resistant to equality in its truest form, even鈥攐r especially鈥攊f that resistance comes in the form of a passive lack of awareness or introspection.

Equally important, better ally-ship demands an ability to listen, and to reckon with our wrongs by recognizing when we鈥檝e hurt, expressing remorse, and not repeating the same mistake. Yes, it鈥檚 possible to be a good person鈥攚ith the best, noblest of intentions鈥攁nd still cause harm. This isn鈥檛 a shame tactic. Neither is it to suggest that we apologize for merely existing. It鈥檚 an earnest call to prioritize impact over intent , and to recognize when our attempts to do good go awry.

And, last, being a better ally requires that we use our privilege鈥攊n whatever form we possess it鈥攖o hold accountable those around us who are doing wrong and don鈥檛 know it, and those who are doing wrong but won鈥檛 accept it. For white women, this means speaking up to other white who use ally-ship as a defense鈥攁s an armor鈥攁gainst accountability.

Ally-ship, in its truest form, isn鈥檛 a medal or a one-time feat. It isn鈥檛 an honor we can even bestow on ourselves. It鈥檚 something, rather, that we ought to earn every day, again and again. It鈥檚 the promise to be better tomorrow鈥攁nd then actually being better tomorrow.

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Emma Coleman
So You Think You’re Not a White Feminist?