The social atmosphere of 2020 created a perfect storm
with the colliding of a highly volatile presidential election, a global
pandemic, and racial tensions all being viewed and fueled from a distance
behind screens within the virtual world. John McWhorter in his book Woke
Racism: How a New Religion Has Betrayed Black America,[1]
suggests that the above stated factors moved woke thinking from an ideology to
a religion and a primitive one at that.[2] McWhorter currently teaches
linguistics at Columbia University. He is the author of more than twenty books
and an editorial writer for the New York Times. McWhorter sees himself in a
unique position as a Black, left wing, Democrat to speak truth to the power of
“vocal and threatening (zealot) minority,” [3]
so that our pluralistic society can return to a table of open conversation. [4]
Woke Racism
could be considered a sequel to Shelby Steele’s Shame: How America’s
Past Sins Have Polarized Our Country,[5]
personal historical journey through the racial challenges of a Black man in
America. One of McWhorter’s main themes is that today’s woke voices, or as he
refers them, the Elect has become so fixated on the power differential[6]
that they have lost sight of the historical progress[7]
resulting in a firmly established personal and collective religious truth that
cannot be questioned without consequences.[8] He goes on to explain the nature of religion
in terms of the race, its effect on the Black community, the Whites who get
drawn in, and the damage it causes the overall society. Although, I found much
of his references to Christianity to be limited and far from the transformative
life of grace that Jesus challenges us to live, one cannot deny that there is
too much truth in that the Evangelical church, can have a very rigid and
domineering dogma. In chapter six, he talks about the need for “separation of
church and state.”[9]
Here the author takes a hard-line separation, but as one who follows Jesus, as
an agent of his love and grace, what does this look like? As a public educator,
I walked this delicate line like a diplomat. But after enjoying many years of
teaching in Poland, where Jesus was an accepted and welcome topic in the classroom,
I might find it difficult in this less tolerant climate of today.
John McWhorter’s overall connection to religion and
the zealot behaviors that seem to silence many gave me some handholds on who
may be open to conversation. He helped to identify those individuals that still
remember that we are one society and that in our face-to-face conversations we
can find a way forward to a better life for us all, and those who will not for
any reason be seated at the table with a person from the other group. Professor
McWhorter also brought to the forefront that the religious thinking of the woke
communicates to the Black community, though subtle, that they are unable to be antifragile [10]
without the white community being demonized.[11]
This type of behavior and thinking does not empower Blacks or Whites it just
buries those deep identity scars under rhetoric and fear.[12]
Woke Racism
concluded with some specific action points to empower poor Blacks in ways to be
contributors that would build their own self-worth. I found these to be helpful
but somewhat flawed. Here are some of my issues:
· There
is an assumption that only poor Black children need this assistance.
o
In my experience all poor children could
benefit from reading assistance, particularly in phonics, sight words, and
direct instruction.
· He
talks around the aspect of creating a new culture that is not centered on
drugs.
o
In my experience direct support of
families through parenting, communication skills, empowering parents to impart
values of relationship, work, deferred gratification.
· I
agree with the need for vocational training, specifically earlier in the
educational journey.
o
But I have also found that when youngsters
have caring adults who believe in their ability to learn they often surprise
you in what they are capable of doing.
· I
wonder if the church took on these tasks within their communities would we be
able to change the views of someone like John McWhorter?
[1] John H. McWhorter, Woke Racism: How a
New Religion Has Betrayed Black America (New York: Portfolio/Penguin,
2021).
[2] Cancel Culture and Wokeness: Interview
with John McWhorter, YouTube (Berlin: Internationala Iiteraturefestival, 2021), The
linguist, comparatist, publicist, and author John McWhorter [via live stream]
has been involved in socio-political debates in the USA for many years, drawing
attention to himself through critical comments on concepts such as ›white
fragility‹. Currently, he sees the freedom of academic teaching as being
threatened by ideological bans. A lecture on cancel culture and wokeness,
followed by a discussion.
[3] Ibid.
[4] James O’Toole, “Speaking Truth to Power:
A White Paper,” Markkula Center for Applied Ethics at Santa Clara University,
October 15, 2015,
https://www.scu.edu/ethics/focus-areas/business-ethics/resources/speaking-truth-to-power-a-white-paper/.
[5] Shelby Steele, Shame: How America’s
Past Sins Have Polarized Our Country (New York: Basic Books, 2015).
[6] Cancel Culture and Wokeness: Interview
with John McWhorter.
[7] Jordan B Peterson, “How Anti-Racism Is
Hurting Black American,” n.d., https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u9quq9NGUcM.
[8] McWhorter, Woke Racism, 44.
[9] Ibid., 175-178.
[10] Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Antifragile:
Things That Gain from Disorder, Random House Trade Paperback edition (New
York: Random House Trade Paperbacks, 2014).
[11] McWhorter, Woke Racism, 47.
[12] O’Toole, “Speaking Truth to Power: A
White Paper.”
No comments:
Post a Comment