Sherbrooke Record

Election shows Canadians still don’t understand what it means to be racist

- By Tamari Kitossa Associate Professor, Sociology, Brock University

In the wake of recent events during the federal election, it seems to me that if Canadians are to address the continuing significan­ce of race and racism, we had better make up our minds to do so head on.

When images surfaced of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in blackface and brownface, many Canadians wondered why that was an act of racism. And then NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh was told by a white Montréal man that he “should cut your turban off…. You’ll look like a Canadian.” The man then said he hoped Singh would win the election.

Why aren’t Canadians better at making sense of what racism is?

What we need — besides action and good policies — is a good, hard-nosed theory of racism. It should be a theory with interestin­g and useful metaphors. It should be a theory folks can grab hold of. It should be a theory that has the capacity to make sense to white nationalis­ts and white supremacis­ts.

Right now we use concepts like “white privilege” and “implicit racism.” These can be useful ways to quickly explain white racism in non-threatenin­g ways in everyday life. They also include an understand­ing of the history and politics of racism. But they may also be too easy and too superficia­l and so they also also nurture white complacenc­y.

We need to find ways to articulate the phenomenon of racism and the intricate ways it is experience­d, observed, measured, practised and resisted.

What is racism?

Let’s start with a brief definition of racism. First, it consists of prejudice as values — when one holds positive selfpercep­tion and negative attitudes and stereotype­s of others: one cannot exist without the other. This is true even if that prejudice is expressed in positive terms, such as “Chinese are good at math” or “Africans are great athletes.”

Second, prejudice is mobilized through power — the coercive power of state and cultural violence. This power manifests itself as discrimina­tion that benefits one group at the expense of others.

In Toward the African Revolution, 20th-century philosophe­r Frantz Fanon argued that there are “cultures with racism and cultures without racism” and so “the racist in a culture with racism is therefore normal.”

But not all racist cultures are created equal.

Pierre Van Den Berghe, sociologis­t and author of Race and Racism, explains that despite the independen­t discovery of racism in a number of societies, the western strain of the virus has eclipsed all others. Through the colonial expansion of Europe, racism spread over the world. He also explains that culture should not be an excuse for individual­s to absolve themselves from the responsibi­lity of white racism.

Therefore, we need a theory that brings together the interplay of cultural permissive­ness with individual responsibi­lity to resist the racism in one’s culture.

Racism is in our memory

One suggestion I have is to borrow from scientist Rupert Sheldrake’s unconventi­onal theory of what’s known as morphic resonance. The idea of morphic resonance is that habits of self-organizati­on are learned and transmitte­d across time, place and space. These habits are then built up as inherited memory.

Applied to the social context, what this means is that racism is a habit of mind and concrete practice in cultural organizati­on.

Maybe the theory of morphic resonance can help us understand how racism is produced and reproduced through social forces. That is, as Fanon explained in Black Skin, White Masks, racism is sociogenic: it is literally and metaphoric­ally learned behaviour that becomes engrained as a cultural imperative.

Real people are racist, not institutio­ns or systems. Thus racism is relational­ly “contagious” within and across generation­s through cultural memory in aphorisms, stories, ideas and ideologies.

Racism is not only learned, it is experience­d as pleasurabl­e, is materially rewarding and is passed on in the nurture of culture where it deceives its perpetrato­rs by appealing to the worst elements of human nature.

Racism is a habitual way of thinking and practising power that circulates among living members of a culture and is bequeathed to future generation­s. It is epigenetic — meaning it influences our genes. But genes are no more destiny than culture. Both can be altered, if not transcende­d, through fostering alternativ­e habits of thought and behaviour.

For anti-racist cultural transforma­tion to take place, a critical mass needs to commit to policy, politics and good faith to create a cascade of changed hearts, minds and behaviour. Given the deep and learned habit of racism, this is no easy task.

Here is the rub: racism, for all its utility to individual­s and groups who wield it, is in fact self-defeating and socially dangerous.

The latter is evident in Nazi-ism, nativism and totalitari­anism. Even aside from the fact that negatively racialized groups are terrorized, racism doesn’t stop there. Berlin journalist Charlotte Beradt’s gathering of anxiety dreams experience­d by ordinary Germans after Adolf Hitler came to power tells us that racism is a chicken that, sooner or later, comes home to roost.

This self-defeating nature of racism is too easily concealed by the elites it principall­y serves, as the authors of Boomerang Ethics: How Racism Affects Us All explain.

Dig in for the long haul

I believe Trudeau played racial politics with his apology. The prime minister confused his personal misdeeds as solely his wrong, and wilfully missed the point of his conduct.

Second World War-era philosophe­r Hannah Arendt, in her essay “Responsibi­lity and Judgement Under Dictatorsh­ip”, demanded that we strike a discerning balance between the culpabilit­y of a mass group and the responsibi­lity of leaders:

“…it is obvious that every generation, by virtue of being born into a historical continuum, is burdened by the sins of the fathers as it is blessed with the deeds of the ancestors.”

Looking at Trudeau exercising the manifest power of state and the latent power of white Canadian culture, it is vital that the conversati­on moves beyond good versus bad, guilt versus innocence and indifferen­ce versus intent. These stark opposition­s tilt too far into the subjective experience of individual responsibi­lity to offer much analytical value.

The emphasis ought to lay with the reality that anti-blackness and white racism is a group dynamic shaping the conduct of individual­s and groups.

Can white Canadians bring themselves to radically theorize and dig in for the long haul to meet the challenge of eradicatin­g white racism and nationalis­m?

Which white political leader living in the fragile glass house of whiteness will have the courage to throw the first stone? Leaders need to lead, sometimes ahead of the lowest common denominato­r they too often follow.

Tamari Kitossa does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisati­on that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliatio­ns beyond their academic appointmen­t.

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