"We are not Post-Racial": Duke Professor Discusses the Refinement of White Supremacy
The Darmouth and FOxNews
Though racism is more covert today, blacks are subject to the same prejudice as they were in the 1960s, Duke University sociology professor Eduardo Bonilla-Silva argued in a lecture on Thursday. Bonilla-Silva said a new form of racism has emerged, replacing Jim Crow racism.
“We are not post-racial,” he said. “This ideology is suave but deadly.”
Focusing on relations between whites and blacks, Bonilla-Silva said the latter’s current economic status has remained the same in recent decades, even as the forms of subordination and racism have since evolved.
After describing various ways in which this ideology is prevalent in today’s society, Bonilla-Silva presented three main points about color-blind racism: the forms of interpreting racism, rhetorical strategies for articulating racism and stories contextualizing racism.
Bonilla-Silva said whites believe that they are not racist and often use the election of President Barack Obama to support the claim that America has moved beyond its racially tense past.
He said these beliefs are “sincere fictions” and countered that blacks and other racial minorities are still behind whites in society, receiving inferior education in “so-called integrated” schools and colleges.
Despite evidence of inequality, Bonilla-Silva said racism is largely overlooked because discrimination presents itself in abstract ways. The societal tendency to “naturalize” racism by calling social constructs natural occurrences is used to justify prejudice against minorities, he said.
Bonilla-Silva defined cultural racism as placing the blame on minorities for their social position.
He said white citizens use rhetoric to express this covert racism: semantic moves, such as saying “some of my best friends are black,” projection, which blames discrimination on the victim and the incomprehensible response to the topic of race. People often argue that they did not personally own slaves or were present at Martin Luther King, Jr.’s march on Washington to deny their personal prejudice.
“Story lines are socially shared tales that are fable-like and incorporate a common schemata and wording,” Bonilla-Silva said.
People often use a personal, negative interaction with a minority and extrapolate to make widespread claims against the entire race, he said.
Bonilla-Silva presented interviews he had collected as part of his ongoing research to give examples of how racism is expressed.
He said that because the interviews were racially tense and sensitive, the interviewer was consistently the same race as the interviewee.
In response to an audience member’s question, Bonilla-Silva said an increasing number of blacks believed that racism has been eliminated.
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