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« Friday cat/dog blogging | Main | Some notes and links »

Saturday, March 18, 2006

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Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Impromptu Carnival: Privilege in the blogosphere:

» Why Does Life Always Get In The Way? from Slant Truth
Errands to run. Work until midnight. No time to seriously address my concerns regarding privilege in the blogsosphere. Lucky for you though, Barb over at Lucky White Girl has put together an Impromptu Carnival with lots of opinions on the matter. IR... [Read More]

» Mapping the Conversation from The Debate Link
Lucky White Girl maps a conversation rolling through the blogosphere regarding the intersection of privilege and blogging. It's really interesting stuff. The debate started with a Feministe discussion on whether feminist sites should allow non-fem... [Read More]

Comments

Oh my goodness, thank you for the best summary I've read of all of our recent tempests! This is terrific -- and thanks for the kind words!

Just a few point of clarification...
I don't know "Hugo" and didn't mention "Hugo" in my post. I'm not sure if you actually read the post, cuz I went to great pains to not name names instead directing people to Kevin's site where he actually identified more of the "key" players.

I chose quite purposefully to not do so because a debate among a majority white, female and male bloggers wasn't as of much interest to me as the implications in terms of who wields power and privilege and is read or seen, linked to quoted in blogland were/are.

Where I entered was around being a new blogger who had been observing the canonization of a few male bloggers (self) defined as "feminists" who were obviously wielding and being allowed by wimmin feminists to wield a fair bit of power.

I'm not sure why you would say that I mentioned "Hugo". I did not. I just "met" him yesterday when he commented about my post.

You've basically made my post about him which I don't like. You've made out that I targetted him as an individual. This is false.

Given the present state of conversation about the issues that have been raised among the "key" players and the power issues I've raised about what goes on in this part of blogland, I'm experiencing your purposeful writing that I named anyone as a little scary.

Who will now come to my door prepared to defend "Hugo" from questions I posed about maleness, patriarchy, feminism and the blogosphere, not directed at him? Not cool.

And again I state:
I'm trying to deconstruct the idea of (male) "feminists" and explore how possible it is for men to function as effective allies while disassociating from the reality that they are men - patriarchs in a patriarchally dominated society.

Beyond that I'm attempting to expose the replicatin of social hierarchies related to gender, gender roles, the oppressed erotic, race, class, academic elitism, etc... all things I've encountered in spades, while blogging among people who define themselves as politicized and aware. Alliances on the surface based in popularity, actually also bring with them a heaping dose of power relations, privilege and domination in political blog circles.

Nuff said. I'm outta here.

I'm sorry, darkdaughta, I just thought it was clear from what you were talking about that Hugo was indeed one of the "male bloggers (self) defined as "feminists" that you were referring to. Maybe I just super-imposed that because Hugo happens to be talking about the same conversation on his blog. I tried to clarify the summary saying that your post is "not so much an attack on Hugo, per say, but a lament that the proliferation of white men writing super-popular feminist blogs is an example of how even when it comes to things like racism and sexism, we still privilege white men over everyone else."
Is that not accurate?

I will correct that part about you referring directly to him. I'm sorry, you're right, you don't name him directly, so I'll take that out. But I do want to be fair and accurate so if you feel I'm misrepresenting you, I'll take you out entirely. I don't want to send any "hugoites" to your site unfairly. I thought your post was very good and has much to say to the conversation I tried to summarize. That said, it's your post. I don't want to misrepresent it and I'll take it out or re-word it if you want.

"I'm sorry, darkdaughta, I just thought it was clear from what you were talking about that Hugo was indeed one of the "male bloggers (self) defined as "feminists" that you were referring to."

It would only have been clear to people who interact with each other on a regular basis. It's probably best not to assume that everyone knows and regularly interacts with the more well known feminist bloggers in the blogosphere. I myself have made a habit of searching out the less well known political bloggers and attempting to forge horizontal alliances with them instead.

Part of the reason I think Hugo's name is flying around is because he seems to be attempting to engage responsibly as opposed to keeping low and hoping the kerfuffle at feministe and pandagon blows over. This is quite courageous and definitely to his creadit in my books.

But my points about male privilege and (male) "feminists" in general dealing with and better utilizing those privileges still stand.

Just so you know, [piny's] post was not taken down, Feministe is having DNS problems.

oops, sorry! I shoulda figured that out sooner. Correction made.

You know, it figures that the month I keep my head in the sand, crap breaks out all over the "big name" blogs. If I was a good person I'd seek out the threads for material to write on, but I'll just follow the links from your impromptu carnival instead :D

And, while I usually don't like to plug my own stuff, I actually have a continually updated post on privilege that I think is relevant to your topic: How to be a real nice guy. It's basically a "how to" guide for privileged people dealing with minority/disadvantaged groups.

Thanks for this post. While the banning/moderating-for-tone discussion is most welcome, my initial post was about acceptance and maintenance of fundamentally segregated blog circles--the arrangement that results in, "Where are all the [whatever] bloggers?"

I'd argue that passive maintenance of those blind corners dovetails very neatly with a blog atmosphere in which non-white-male commenters are dismissed as making no sense or having no reason. When you pretend and allow others to pretend that x commenter has no larger, independent, ongoing conversational self, you put their comments in a context of nullity.

I think it's also behind some of the "But I don't know where to staaaaaaart!" whining from baby anti-racists. ...IOW, some of this "ally work" is work you've made for yourself: the accumulation of some very bad habits.

I am reminded of the manifesto QUEERS READ THIS for some reason...

At a personal level of experience, what I've found is this. In almost any topic (I don't care what the topic is, you could be talking about purebred dogs, even), you will reach a level of discourse where there's a certain set of topics that hold down any discussion of other topics. If you own this forum (be it a newsgroup, mailing list, chat room, blog, etc etc etc) you will at some point have to decide what to do about it. If you do not do anything, the discourse will remain tied to those certain set of topics.

So for example on a dog mailing list, the sheer volume of "newbie" dog owner questions, if not filtered out, will mean that advanced breeders who want to discuss pedigrees and track genetic propensities won't be able to discuss much, even if that list is the perfect venue. I'm sure you can see how this applies in some form or other elsewhere.

But you might also decide there's a need for that other level of discussion so you shut out the newbie talk (or more likely start a second mailing list in which newbies cannot post). Now you immediately step into the same set of landmines and the choices you make about what go in etc, are reflections, many times, of what's going on IRL. Again, I think the extension to other topics is obvious here.

So, you can do something along the lines of what Hugo does, which is admirable in of itself, but also guarantees the discussion will stay at that constantly-challenged level. Or you can cut that out, and run, whether or not you know it, into a similar set of constraints depending on the choices you've made about what stays and what goes.

It's a damned if you do, damned if you don't proposition. I've encounted this same exact issue on mailing lists and forums, regardless of the topic, for 18 years now. The best answer I can come up with is to go where I want on a personal level (after all, it's my time, money, effort invested), but then make damn sure I'm keeping up with other view points that I might not feel comfortable with or agree with, or have even considered until I saw them brought up elsewhere. In a sense, I have to realize my own limitations, I can't possibly provide everything myself.

There's no way to "win" (perhaps better said, satisfy everyone), there's no way to achieve some kind of perfect state where everyone can chime in and so on and so forth. The best I've found is to be aware of these fault lines and fractures. And your own examination is inevitably limited: everyone's is, just in different ways.

I don't know: it's hard to put this experience and feelings into words, and it sort of feels pretentious when I try to spell it out...

Thanks for all the comments. Something's wrong with Typepad I think 'cause usually it sends me an email when someone's left a comment but it hasn't been doing that lately so sorry I can't respond personally.

tekanji: I'm sorry I saw your post about that referenced in several blogs lately. I shoulda thought to include it. I think I've read it, but I'll check it out again and see if I can fit it in.

piny: yeeeaaah, I think I see what you're saying-- that we tend to self-segregate in the blogosphere?

BEG: yeah, I think that was the idea behind Allywork -to have one place to send people with those kinds of questions about white privilege. I might have a post about something related to this soon.

(I'm sorry, I just came from the dentist and am still kinda dopey!)

piny: yeeeaaah, I think I see what you're saying-- that we tend to self-segregate in the blogosphere?

Do in-groups definitely perpetuate their own circle-jerk limitations? Yes.

I guess what I'm saying as well is that a blog is someone's home, their context, their personality. When you read someone's blog, you learn a great deal about their interactions with other people, and you tend to get a whole new dimension to their arguments--plus, of course, you're reading the stories that they're using to formulate those arguments. You learn to talk to them, and you invest in them as conversational partners. When you _ignore_ their blog and blog circle, it's much easier for you to atomize them when they come talk on your blog--you don't know them, you won't know them.

...and yet again we end up talking the majority bloggers. How about spending the time on including women of colour instead of linking and referring constantly to the same old same old ?

devious, I think that's what we're doing here.

Sorry, this comment is on completely the wrong blog. I had about 5 tabs open and slapped this one here. My apologies. Please delete

Sorry, this comment is on completely the wrong blog. I had about 5 tabs open and slapped this one here. My apologies. Please delete

Well, I kinda was doing that, though.

Now I'm curious. Can you direct me to the conversation you were complaining about?

Well, I know over on darkdaughta's post about male privilege in the blogosphere someone pointed out in the comments section how ironic it is that while trying to decenter whiteness and male-ness we ended up talking all over again about the big white male bloggers. Here's a link

It was one of the threads about the Hugo affair. I was trying to catch up on "the story so far.. having not followed from the beginning of the "debate". I got fed up after readng through 150 or more comments and wondered why we, and I include myself, spend so much time and energy on the issues of hurting men's feelings instead of dealing with the issue of exclusion. Anyway, apologies again for posting that here. I am hoping to write something for the carnival.

no biggie, like piny said, we're doing it too.

As a white woman devoted to ending racism, I also have many close relationships with people of color. Of those, quite a few of my friends don't have the money to be online. That is one of the first things that comes to mind when thinking about privelege and the blogsphere. Just to be online at all, or to have free time to be on line. Also, white privelege tends to teach us that *our* thoughts are important ones! At many meetings it is the white folks who hog up the conversation and it never occurs to them they are doing so ...

Other than that, setting aside any un-useful guilt--and responding to your thought on the blogsphere reflecting the state of society--I do think the blogsphere needs to reflect life after racism. The world we want where racism does not exist...would look like???? And thus, what would the blogsphere look like???

Funny, I haven't been in touch with a movement by white men claiming to be oppressed by feminists. I talk about men's oppression some but not in that context. I'm angling more on how to stop training men to be sexist from day one. "It's a boy!" is when it starts, doesn't it? My thinking on that is those guys (in that movement) would be akin to me saying I'm being oppressed by people of color. What I mean by that is any hostility coming at me from a person of color needs to be understood as *their reaction to being oppressed* NOT reverse racism!


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