One Day I Went for a Run: Presenting a New Metaphor for Teaching about Privilege

Clifford
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Abstract

abstract:Those of us who teach about inequality emphasize how important it is to teach not only about oppression, but also about its counterpart, privilege. In sociology, when we discuss privilege we focus on how rights, benefits, advantages, and favors are unearned. It can be a difficult concept, though, to teach. Some students are resistant to the notion that they are privileged, and it is easy for them to deny it because of how invisible and taken-for-granted privilege is. Instructors looking to teach about privilege have long turned to Peggy McIntosh's "invisible knapsack" metaphor. While I embrace the method of using a metaphor to illustrate a complicated concept, particularly for undergraduates, I struggled to think of what could replace the knapsack for our current students. Here, I present an updated metaphor to help students better understand privilege, based on a run I went on one day. In this scenario, I describe privilege as literally part of the air we breathe—just as invisible, and just as impossible to avoid the effects of. I have since used this to try to help students better understand how privilege operates, and why that privilege is often invisible to those experiencing it, and all too obvious to those oppressed by it.
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有一天我去跑步:为特权教学提供一个新的隐喻
我们这些教授不平等的人强调,不仅要教授压迫,还要教授与之对应的特权,这是多么重要。在社会学中,当我们讨论特权时,我们关注的是权利、利益、优势和恩惠是如何不劳而获的。然而,这可能是一个很难教的概念。一些学生对自己享有特权的观念持抵制态度,他们很容易否认这一点,因为特权是多么无形和理所当然。长期以来,想要教授特权的教师都求助于佩吉·麦金托什(Peggy McIntosh)的“看不见的背包”比喻。虽然我喜欢用比喻来说明一个复杂的概念,尤其是对本科生来说,但我很难想出什么东西可以取代我们现在的学生的背包。为了帮助学生更好地理解特权,我在这里提出了一个更新的比喻,这个比喻是基于我一天的一次跑步。在这种情况下,我把特权描述为我们呼吸的空气的一部分——就像看不见的一样,也不可能避免其影响。从那以后,我就利用这一点来帮助学生们更好地理解特权是如何运作的,以及为什么特权对那些经历它的人来说往往是无形的,而对那些受它压迫的人来说却太明显了。
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