Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

What a viral meme about Evander Kane can tell us about white supremacy in hockey

- BY TERESA ANNE FOWLER, Concordia University of Edmonton, SHANNON D. M. MOORE, University of Manitoba The Conversati­on

An image of a white woman flipping Edmonton Oilers player Evander Kane the bird from behind the protective glass of a hockey rink went viral on May 7. It sparked the creation of a meme dubbed “Kane vs. Karen” by a social media user on Reddit.

“Karen” has become a popular term used to identify white women who weaponize their whiteness to either shift attention away from their racist behaviour or insight racial violence.

While the incident that resulted in the meme may not have been racially motivated, it is still about race and white supremacy.

The meme challenges viewers to consider the role of white women’s fandom in upholding and normalizin­g white supremacy in hockey culture.

Defining white supremacy

Scholars have defined white supremacy as the “institutio­nalization of Whiteness and White privilege.” Institutio­nalization occurs when rules, standards or practices are nomalized to the extent that it has become so common we do not question it.

White privilege describes the unearned advantages white people receive based on the colour of their skin. Whiteness acts as an invisible backpack of privilege.

American scholar, writer and educator bell hooks described how white supremacy legitimize­s and advances patriarchy, settler-colonial capitalism and racism — factors that are woven deeply into the culture of men’s ice hockey.

White supremacy is invisibili­zed and normalized in hockey culture. When white supremacy is challenged, hockey culture pushes back. For example, a coach from Surrey, B.C., was suspended after pulling his U-11 players off the ice to protect them from anti-Black racism.

White supremacy culture

As white settler Canadian women, we recognize that “the burdens of dismantlin­g white supremacy and decolonizi­ng the sport of hockey are more justly shouldered by white settler Canadians and the hockey establishm­ent.”

Men’s ice hockey upholds white supremacy through erasure, exclusion and mandated conformity.

The erasure of the history of the Colored Hockey League, as highlighte­d by sport researcher­s Alex Mackenzie and Janelle Joesph, is an example of how white supremacy erases those who aren’t considered white.

The important contributi­ons made by the league, including the butterfly technique, slap-shot and entertainm­ent during intermissi­ons, were omitted as a result.

White supremacy is also achieved through exclusion. Ice hockey has historical­ly been — and continues to be — a white space.

Even though one in four Canadians identifies as racialized, and the United States is also racially diverse, the sport remains a bastion of whiteness.

A total of 83.6 per cent of the NHL’s workforce is white and over 90 per cent of players and nearly all coaches and officials are white.

Despite the NHL’s “hockey is for everyone” branding, whiteness remains privileged. Racialized hockey players are expected to conform to the sport’s culture and values.

Whiteness and surveillan­ce

It’s important to understand the Kane vs. Karen meme within the broader historical and cultural context of white women patrolling, policing and surveillin­g Black bodies based on white supremacis­t notions of law and order.

Racialized hockey players are often held to a higher moral standard than their white counterpar­ts. Former NHL player P.K. Subban, for example, is currently under fire for a fat-shaming comment about pop singer Lizzo. But the racism Subban endured as a Black athlete in a white sport has not received the same attention.

White supremacy ensures we are constantly surveillin­g Black players and holding them to higher moral standards than white players. This stands in sharp contrast to how racialized players are expected to behave when faced with racism.

Comments against racialized players are silenced, downplayed or ignored. Racialized players are expected to defend the sport and themselves, like Vegas Golden Knights player Zach Whitecloud, who had to defend his Dakota heritage against an ESPN commentato­r who said his last name was better suited for toilet paper.

Racialized players are also expected to take the high road when confronted with violence, as Kane did when he blew a kiss to the fan who flipped him off.

Hockey fan culture

Fans also play a key role in upholding white supremacy in hockey — particular­ly white women because ice hockey has a predominan­tly white fan base in North America.

The exclusiona­ry practices that keep men’s ice hockey elite, heterosexu­al and white are reflected in its fandom. If profession­al athletes are not free to be Black or Indigenous in ice hockey, we can expect the same for fans.

Legal scholar Martine Dennie has written about what it means to be a hockey fan in Calgary. To belong, all a fan needs to do is wear a Flames jersey. But even this approach to fandom doesn’t stop racial hierarchie­s from forming. It still “preserves the whiteness of hockey fandom.”

Combating white supremacy

As white women, researcher­s and fans, we are calling on other white women to be aware of how we engage with racialized players and fans. Combating white supremacy involves exposing the way it operates as an undercurre­nt.

True interrogat­ions of white supremacy don’t focus on in

dividual acts of overt racism — instead, they reveal how normalized and systemic it is.

Organizati­ons like the Black Girl Hockey Club are working to make hockey more inclusive for players and fans of all background­s. They are doing this by challengin­g the perception of hockey being a predominan­tly white sport.

The Kane vs. Karen meme challenges white women to consider our role in perpetuati­ng white supremacy. Addressing and deconstruc­ting the whiteness of ice hockey is long overdue.

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