Text Review Assignment-Jaysa Saylor

Author Diana Gabaldon published her first installment of the successful historical fiction series Outlander, on June 1, 1991. She has penned an additional seven novels with promises of two more to complete the series.  The success of these novels led to the production of the award-winning Starz show, also named Outlander, in 2014. The series follows Claire Fraser, a WWII combat field surgeon, who mistakenly travels back in time to the Scottish Highlands in 1745, where she meets the dashing and seditious Jamie Fraser; a high ranking member of Clan Mackenzie and Clan Fraser, who helps protect her from corrupt British officers and her “dangerous” contemporary thinking.  Outlander not only presents this emotional love story, but also presents it audience with Scottish history and other crisis of conscious that plagued the time period.

In the episode, “Do No Harm,” Claire and Jamie travel to his Aunt Jocasta’s North Carolina plantation for a visit. Jocasta suffers from glaucoma and has been rendered blind from the disease. Shortly after their arrival, Jocasta announces that she will be willing her property and estate to her nephew, Jamie.  While they both agree that it was very generous on Jocasta’s part to leave them the plantation, Claire cannot accept owning slaves.  Jamie is also extremely forward thinking, and having been a prisoner and a tortured slave, also conveys that he has no desire to “own any man.” Suddenly, a messenger appears with urgent news that one of Jocasta’s slaves has struck a white man.  Claire and Jamie ride down to the lower part of the property to find that the superficially injured white man has impaled a young slave named Rufus in the abdomen with a meat hook and is suspending in over a tree branch. Claire’s disdain is very apparent as she orders the white man to lower Rufus and quickly takes him back to the mansion to operate, while simultaneously refusing to tend to the white man who just has a small cut on his ear and will make a full recovery.  She successfully removed the hook from Rufus’ abdominal cavity but then an angry mob starts to gather outside of the home, insisting that if Rufus is not turned over to the group by midnight, they will enter the home, take Rufus, and burn Jocasta’s property to the ground. The mob is adamant that Rufus pay for his crimes by hanging. Jamie and Claire come to the realization that regardless of their feelings about the treatment of Rufus, that he is going to die. They decide instead of him suffering more than he already has, they will give him poison that will help him succumb peacefully into death.  Claire administers the medicine telling Rufus it will help him sleep and the deed is done. Jamie takes the boy’s body to the mob to prove he has died, and they still tie his body and drag him behind wagons and lynch in him front of the property.

This episode conveys a very powerful message that we have explored in this class all semester. The discrimination and mistreatment of people of color and “the other,” is woven into the very fabric and foundation of our country and society.

Yo, Is This Privilege?

Yo, Is This Privilege?

 

Hello readers! My name is Jaysa Saylor and I would like to welcome you to my column. Today we are going to be discussing white privilege. Is it real? Is it offensive to white people? Is it woven into the very fabric of this country?

Privilege is defined as “a special right, advantage, or immunity granted or available to a particular person or group.” Often privilege is synonymous with wealth or power, and I have found that many people in my family are instantly defensive if I mention the term “white privilege.” My grandfather’s side of the family is steeped in traditional conservatism. My mother, and most of her cousins, are emphatic liberals, who play rock, paper, scissors at Christmas time to see who is going to be the one turns a hardcore game of Euchre into a heated political debate. One year, my Great Uncle Steve threw a folding chair into a living room full of children after someone wouldn’t admit that Reagan was the best President of the modern era.  Man, I love Walter Christmas parties.

On a recent visit to my grandfather, we got into a heated discussion about the current situation in our country today. I mentioned white privilege because I genuinely wanted to know his opinion. He is college educated man, with a Master’s in Education and a retired Columbus city high school teacher of 35 years. He tends to be more middle of the road then his other brothers, so I figured he would have something to contribute on this topic. Instead I was instantly met with a defensive response. “White privilege?! I was raised in a home with 8 children! No part of my childhood was privileged!” He went on his usual tangent about how far he walked I the snow to school, how he put himself through college on a pizza delivery man’s salary and graduated debt free from The Ohio State University. “But isn’t what you just explained to me an example of white privilege?”

We first need to identify what we mean when we say white privilege. White privilege doesn’t mean that your life wasn’t or isn’t hard. It simply means that your skin color isn’t one of the things making it harder. As I explained this to my Boomer grandfather, he asked me to provide specific examples to prove my point. Even though he is retired, he is forever a teacher.  So, here we go.

 

  1. As a white woman, I have the privilege of having a generally good relationship with the police. I discussed this in one of my diary entries. A guy I am dating, who happens to be African American, was treated so poorly at a traffic stop on Kenny Road, that I reported the officer’s conduct to the Upper Arlington Police Department. I have never heard back so I’m sure it was just a simple slap on the wrist, if it was even addressed at all. We were driving back to his apartment after dinner and my lead foot got the best of me as it usually does. After we were stopped, we sat in the car for a long time. We weren’t approached by the officer until his backup arrived. They walked up on either side of the car and treated me like I was being held under some kind of duress.  After I assured the officers that I wasn’t being held hostage and I did in fact know the man in my passenger seat, they let me go. Without a ticket. I would like to also mention I have been pulled over on this road multiple times, going well over the speed limit and not given a ticket once. If you are a person of color, it doesn’t matter if you comply with police. Putting your hands up, not resisting, saying “I can’t breathe,” doesn’t mean you will make it out of an encounter with the police alive. This is privilege.
  2. As a white woman, I have the privilege of having a white sounding name. According to a Harvard Business study, ethnic sounding names on a resume have less of a chance of getting an interview. They found that if they “whitened” the names of Asian and African American resumes, that 25% of African American applicants got calls for interviews (versus the 10% when they used their own name) and 21% Asian applicants got interviews (versus 11.5% when they used their own name). Preference in the workplace based on names instead of credentials, is privilege.
  3. As a white woman, I have the privilege of learning about my race in school. The history of the white Anglo-Saxon is embedded deep into American core curriculums. Yet, Black history and other ethnicities’ history are commonly electives at the college level. My high school did not offer any specific classes or electives that specifically taught or highlighted the history of any people of color. This is privilege.
  4. As a white woman, I have the privilege of finding children’s books that represent my race. In an NY Times op-ed piece by Walter Myers, he discloses that out of the 3200 children’s book published in 2013, 93 of them were about black people. Additionally, only 8% of the children’s books were written by or about people of color. This is privilege.
  5. As a white woman, I have the privilege of seeing the media portray their blatant bias for my race. When Brock Turner was caught viciously raping an unconscious woman behind a dumpster on Stanford’s campus, it gained international media attention. Turner ended up serving a 3-month sentence which wasn’t a fraction what he deserved. All we heard in closing arguments was how “20 minutes of action shouldn’t ruin his bright future.” Mike Brown was walking in the middle of the street and was murdered in cold blood because he “fit a description.” The media wasted no time in disclosing his criminal record and conveying how the actions of the officer were justified. A black man is killed, we hear about all the bad things he used to be. When a white man rapes, they tell us all about the great things he could become. This is privilege.
  6. As a white woman, I never have to worry about getting rejected for loans because the home I can afford is in a neighborhood or place considered a low financial risk. This practice was a direct action of the United States government to segregate people of color into specific neighborhoods yet make it impossible for them to qualify or attain home ownership. Redlining wasn’t deemed a discriminatory practice until 1968, but in major metropolitan cities like Atlanta, Detroit, Chicago, there are very distinctive neighborhoods predominantly white and predominantly black still in existence. And now the inhabitants of these neighborhoods are facing gentrification and being forced out because they can’t afford new real estate and developments. This is privilege.

 

So, I asked my grandfather again. Is white privilege real? He reluctantly admitted that “people of color may have it a bit harder,” but that was the most I could get out of him. I guess I will take it. Because white privilege IS real and woven into the very fabric of society.  The country was built on the very foundation of oppression and is meant to disenfranchise people of color. So where do we go from here? First, we need to admit that white privilege exists. That is the first step in changing the narrative.

 

My last tactic with my grandfather was to ask a question the great Jane Elliott asks whenever she gives speeches. If you are unaware of who Jane Elliott is, she is most famous for conducting the “brown eye, blue eye” experiment in her 3rd grade class in 1968 to prove that racism is taught.  She is a civil rights activist who continues to advocate for equality for people of color. Anyway, Elliott always asks her congregation if, they, knowing what they know of our culture and society, would want to be a black individual in society today? So, I implore you, to answer this question honestly. My answer of course was no. As are most of the people she surveys. This is the ultimate proof of privilege. By answering no, I am indicating that I know what it means to be black in society today, and that I don’t want it for me. This is privilege. This is reality. And it needs to change.

Context Research Presentation – Black Panther

Cultural Importance of Black Panther

In January 2018, Black Panther graced the big screen as one of the most anticipated Marvel films of all time. It’s $200 million dollar budget and all star cast wasn’t the only reason this film was so anxiously awaited. This film was the first large scale film to feature a black director and predominantly all black cast. Hollywood and mainstream media is not historically known for their commitment to diversity. Everyday the silver screen reflects infinite versions of white protagonists, but rarely do African Americans get to see themselves represented as heroes. This was a defining moment in modern history where people of color could gaze at the big screen and see their culture represented and reflected proudly.

Besides the groundbreaking representation for people of color in a major motion picture, Black Panther won countless awards for it’s cinematic genius. Black Panther grossed over $1.344 billion dollars globally to date. The film received a myriad of awards and nominations. Seven Academy Awards nominations, including Best Picture, securing wins for Best Costume Design, Best Original Score, and Best Production Design. Black Panther was the first superhero film to receive a Best Picture nomination and the first Marvel Cinematic Universe film to win an Academy Award. It also received three nominations at the Golden Globe Awards, two wins at the Screen Actors Guild Awards, and three wins at the Critics’ Choice Awards out of a total of twelve nominations. Black Panther has also been named one of the ten best films of 2018 by the National Board of Review and one of the ten best films of 2018 by the American Film Institute.

Black Panther acknowledges and celebrates everything from traditional African society to African-American political debates. It depicts women of color in power positions and the brains behind the groundbreaking technology that sets Wakanda apart. Representation matters and this groundbreaking film set a new precedent that hopefully Hollywood and society continue to follow.

Works Cited

Eckhardt, Giana M. (2018) “Black Panther: Thrills, Postcolonial Discourse, and Blacktopia,” Markets, Globalization & Development Review: Vol. 3: No. 2, Article 6.

Johnson, Malia. “Exploring African Culture in Black Panther.”Info.umkc.edu, https://info.umkc.edu/unews/exploring-african-culture-in-black-panther/

Smith, Jamil. “The Revolutionary Power of Black Panther.” Time, https://time.com/black-panther/.

Diary Of Systemic Injustices-Jaysa Saylor

My fourth journal entry addressed blatant racial profiling.  On February 16, 2021 Texas native, 18-year-old Rodney Reese was heading home from his job at Walmart when he was stopped by officers from the Plano Police Department who were responding to a welfare check about reports of “a man in a short sleeve shirt stumbling in the snow.” Rodney is a high school senior, lives with his mother only a few blocks away and repeatedly told the officers he was fine.

Rodney was caught on body camera footage that he was “straight” and didn’t need their assistance.  The police were caught saying,  “Alright, but you’re walking in the middle of the road.”  Texas was in the midst of a crazy winter storm, so his decision to walk in the road ultimately was due to the conditions of the sidewalks. Rodney apologized and continued walking home, but for some reason the officers continued to follow him. After two minutes, they put him in handcuffs and arrested him, with the official charge being pedestrian in the roadway.  He spent the night in jail.

The Plano Police chief Ed Drain DEFENDED the actions of his officers and was quoted as saying,  “There’s a lot of information that we know about this case that we didn’t know at the time. Those officers didn’t know his age. They didn’t know he was 18. They didn’t know he worked at Walmart. They didn’t know where he lived.”  Isn’t their job as officers of the law to investigate? Shouldn’t they just have asked him? A few simple questions and skills of deduction would have revealed all was well. Instead they targeted and profiled this man and assumed he was doing wrong because he was a black male.

Rodney’s heartbreaking reaction?

“It’s ‘cause I’m Black, I fit a description. It hurts, man. I don’t even think the call would’ve happened if I wasn’t Black. Honestly, I really don’t.”

According to the NAACP, 84% of Black adults say white people are treated better than black people by police and 63% of white adults agree based on 2019 research on police relations. 87% of Black adults say the U.S. criminal justice system is more unjust towards Black people and 61% of white adults agree. Despite the fact that more white people have been killed by police, Black and Hispanic people are disproportionately impacted.  While white people make up a little over 60% of the population, they only make up about 41% of fatal police shootings.  Black people make up 13.4% of the population, but make up 22% of fatal police shootings.  This does not take into consideration other forms of police brutality, including non-lethal shootings (NAACP.org, 2021) The inherent bias is alive and well in this country.

 

References

https://dfw.cbslocal.com/2021/02/22/texas-black-teen-jailed-walking-during-snowstorm-charges-dropped/

https://www.naacp.org/criminal-justice-fact-sheet/