Judge Sonia Sotomayor and the New Racism: Getting Beyond the Politics of Denial

by: Henry A. Giroux, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

Judge Sonia Sotomayor and the New Racism: Getting Beyond the Politics of Denial
Judge Sonia Sotomayor with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. (Photo: Doug Mills / The New York Times)

    While many liberals suggest that with the election of Barack Obama to the presidency the United States has become a post-racial society, many conservatives have now taken the opposite position, prompted by the nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court, that racism is alive and well in the republic.(1) According to many right-wing pundits and politicians extending from Rush Limbaugh to Newt Gingrich, Judge Sotomayor is a "racist" and a "bigot" because of a largely decontextualized 32-word quote abstracted from a speech she gave in 2001 in which she stated: "I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn't lived that life." Gingrich ignored the broader context in which the quote appeared, arguing for critical reason over biography, going so far as to suggest that it was symptomatic of a new type of racism, exclaiming in Twitter-like fashion, "Imagine a judicial nominee said 'my experience as a white man makes me better than a Latina woman' - new racism is no better than old racism." All of this saber-rattling rhetoric about the emergence of a new kind of racism, which insists rather ironically that whites rather than people of color are the real victims of personal and institutional racism, does more than suggest a kind of historical amnesia that actually rewrites the meaning of racism. It also points to a long-standing fear among many conservatives that diversity rather the bigotry is the real threat to democracy.

    What the ongoing attack on Judge Sotomayor suggests is that the public morality of American life and social policy regarding matters of racial justice are increasingly subject to a politics of denial. Denial in this case is not merely about the failure of public memory or the refusal to know, but an active ongoing attempt on the part of many conservatives to rewrite the discourse of race so as to deny its valence as a force for discrimination and exclusion either by translating it as a threat to American culture or relegating it to the language of the private sphere. The idea of race and the conditions of racism have real political effects and eliding them only makes those effects harder to recognize. And yet, the urgency to recognize how language is used to name, organize, order and categorize matters of race not only has academic value, it also provides a location from which to engage difference and the relationship between the self and the other and between the public and private. In addition, the language of race is important because it strongly affects political and policy agendas as well. One only has to think about the effects of Charles Murray's book, "Losing Ground," on American welfare policies in the 1980s.(2) But language is more than a mode of communication or a symbolic practice that produces real effects, it is also a site of contestation and struggle

    The charge that Judge Sotomayor is a racist suggests something about the changing vocabulary about race and racial injustice that has to be both critically understood and politically engaged. In fact, there is something called a new racism and it has been brilliantly explored by a number of writers including David Theo Goldberg, Elizabeth Ansell, Howard Winant and Manning Marable, among others, though not in the way conservatives are using the term. Unlike the old racism, which defined racial difference in terms of fixed biological categories organized hierarchically, the new racism operates in various guises proclaiming, among other things, race-neutrality, asserting culture as a marker of racial difference or marking race as a private matter. Unlike the crude racism with its biological referents and pseudo-scientific legitimations, buttressing its appeal to white racial superiority, the new racism cynically recodes itself within the vocabulary of the civil rights movement, invoking the language of Martin Luther King Jr. to argue that individuals should be judged by the "content of their character" and not by the color of their skin. What is crucial about the new racism is that it demands an updated analysis of how racist practices work through the changing nature of language and other modes of representation. One of the most sanitized and yet pervasive forms of the new racism is evident in the language of color-blindness and the ideology of privatization. Within this approach, it is argued that racial conflict and discrimination is a thing of the past and that race has no bearing on an individual's or group's location or standing in contemporary American society. Color-blindness does not deny the existence of race, but the claim that race is responsible for alleged injustices that reproduce group inequalities, privilege whites, negatively impacts on economic mobility, the possession of social resources and the acquisition of political power. Put differently, inherent in the logic of color-blindness is the central assumption that race has no valence as a marker of identity or power when factored into the social vocabulary of everyday life and the capacity for exercising individual and social agency. In an era "free" of racism, race becomes a matter of taste, lifestyle or heritage, but has nothing to do with politics, legal rights, educational access or economic opportunities. Moreover, as politics becomes more racialized, the discourse about race becomes more privatized. Veiled by a denial of how racial histories accrue political, economic and cultural weight to the social power of whiteness, color-blindness and the privatization of racism deletes the relationship between racial differences and power and in doing so reinforces whiteness as the arbiter of value for judging difference against a normative notion of homogeneity.(3) For advocates of color-blindness, race as a political signifier is conveniently denied, relegated to the historical past, or defined merely as an individual prejudice or simply a matter of individualized choices, allowing many conservatives to ignore racism as a corrosive force for expanding the dynamics of ideological and structural inequality throughout society.(4) Color-blindness is a convenient ideology for enabling whites to ignore the degree to which race is tangled up with asymmetrical relations of power, functioning as a potent force for patterns of exclusion and discrimination including. but not limited to, housing, mortgage loans, health care, schools and the criminal justice system. This is the issue missing from the current debate about the new racism being put forth by Gingrich and others.

    If one effect of color-blindness functions is to deny racial hierarchies, another consequence is that it offers whites not only the belief that America is now a level playing field, but that the success that whites enjoy relative to minorities of color is largely due to individual determination, a strong work ethic, high moral values and a sound investment in education. Not only does color-blindness offer up a highly racialized (though paraded as race-transcendent) notion of agency, but it also provides an ideological space free of guilt, self-reflection and political responsibility, despite the fact that blacks have a disadvantage in almost all areas of social life: housing, jobs, education, income levels, mortgage lending and basic everyday services.(5) In a society marked by profound racial and class inequalities, it is difficult to believe that character and merit - as color-blindness advocates would have us believe - are the prime determinants for social and economic mobility and a decent standard of living. The relegation of racism and its effects in the larger society to the realm of private beliefs, values, and behavior does little to explain a range of overwhelming realities–such as soaring black unemployment, the stepped-up resegregation of American schools and the growing militarization and lock down status of public education through the widespread use of zero tolerance policies, whose most egregious effects are on poor minority youth.(6) Or the fact that African-American males live on average six years less than their white counterparts. It is worth noting that nothing challenges the myth that America has become a color-blind, post-racist nation more than the racialization of the criminal justice system since the late 1980s. As the sociologist Loic Wacquant has observed, the expansion of the prison-industrial complex represents a "de facto policy of 'carceral affirmative action' towards African-Americans."(7) This is born out by the fact that while American prisons house over 2.3 million inmates, "roughly half of them are black even though African-Americans make up less than 13 percent of the nation's population.... According to the Justice Policy Institute, there are now more black men behind bars than in college in the United States. One in ten of the world's prisoners is an African-American male."(8)

    As one of the most powerful ideological and institutional factors for deciding how identities are categorized and power, material privileges and resources distributed, race represents an essential political category for examining the relationship between justice and a democratic society. What the Sotomayor debate suggests is that far from being relegated to the past, racism in its various forms can be resurrected for both attacking minorities of color and for appropriating victim status for whites, while suggesting that people of color are the "real" racists. How else to explain Newt Gingrich's charge that Judge Sotomayor is a "Latina woman racist" or Karl Rove's charge that she is "not necessarily" smart, resurrecting elements of genetic racism. Rather than simply defend Sotomayor against such racist charges, it may be time for progressives and others to take the debate about racism a step further and engage in a real dialogue about the historical legacy of the new racism and how it functions in American society, particularly as it seeks to suggest that the main victims of racism in its various rhetorical and institutional guises are white men.

    Bob Herbert has recently responded to the attacks on Judge Sotomayor by arguing that:

Here's the thing. Suddenly these hideously pompous and self-righteous white males of the right are all concerned about racism. They're so concerned that they're fully capable of finding it in places where it doesn't for a moment exist. Not just finding it, but being outraged by it to the point of apoplexy. Oh, they tell us, this racism is a bad thing! Are we supposed to not notice that these are the tribunes of a party that rose to power on the filthy waves of racial demagoguery.... Where were the howls of outrage at this strategy that was articulated by Lee Atwater as follows: "By 1968, you can't say 'nigger' - that hurts you. Backfires. So you say stuff like forced busing, states' rights, and all that stuff."(9)

    Herbert is only partly right on this issue. The right-wing attack on Sotomayor is about more than "the howling of a fading species." It is about how racism takes on different forms in different historical contexts and the need for it to be challenged critically and politically. Of course, Herbert is correct in suggesting that the conservative appropriation of the new racism is not just disingenuous but hypocritical, and that even a minor lesson in history reveals the bigotry behind the strategy. But he is remiss in not suggesting that we actually take up the discourse of the new racism and do it in ways that give it real meaning and substance, so it can be both easily recognized and politically challenged in terms not set by conservatives.

    (1) For a critical summary of the ongoing racist and sexist smear campaign waged against Judge Sotomayor, see Faiz Shakir, "Right-Wing Hate Machine Launches Vicious Campaign of Racist and Sexist Attacks On Sotomayor," AlterNet (May 30, 2009). Online: www.altenet.org/story/140248.

    (2) Charles Murray, "Losing Ground: American Social Policy, 1950-1980" (New York: Basic Books, 1985).

    (3) This issue is taken up brilliantly in David Theo Goldberg's, "The Racial State" (Malden, MA: Blackwell Books, 2002) and David Theo Goldberg's, "The Threat of Race: Reflections on Racial Neoliberalism" (Malden: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009).

    (4) Manning Marable, "Beyond Color-blindness," The Nation (December 14, 1998), p. 29.

    (5) For specific figures in all areas of life, see Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, "White Supremacy and Racism in the Post-Civil Rights Era" (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2001), especially the chapter "White Supremacy in the Post-Civil Rights Era," pp. 89-120.

    (6) I address these issues in detail in Henry A. Giroux, "Youth in a Suspect Society: Democracy or Disposability?" (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009).

    (7) Loic Wacquant, "From Slavery to Mass Incarceration: Rethinking the 'Race Question' in the U.S." in New Left Review, (Jan-Feb 2002), p. 44.

    (8) Paul Street, "Mass Incarceration and Racist State Priorities at Home and Abroad," DissidentVoice (March 11, 2003), pp. 6-7 Available on line at http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Articles2/Street_MassIncarceration.htm. See also, Jennifer Warren, "One in 100: Behind Bars in America 2008" (Washington, DC: The PEW Center on the States, 2008).

    (9) Bob Herbert, "The Howls of a Fading Species," New York Times (June 2, 2009), p. A23.

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Henry A. Giroux currently holds the Global TV Network Chair Professorship at McMaster University in the English and Cultural Studies Department. He has taught at Boston University, Miami University of Ohio, and Penn State University. His most recent books include: Youth in a Suspect Society (Palgrave, 2009); Politics After Hope: Obama and the Crisis of Youth, Race, and Democracy (Paradigm, 2010); Hearts of Darkness: Torturing Children in the War on Terror (Paradigm, 2010); and he is working on two new books titled Zombie Politics and Culture in the Age of Casino Capitalism and Education and the Crisis of Public Values, both of which will be published in 2011 by Peter Lang Publishers. Giroux is also a member of Truthout's Board of Directors. His website is www.henryagiroux.com.

 

 


Comments

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Well-reasoned article Dr.

Well-reasoned article Dr. Giroux, thanks. Is it possible, though, that the larger strategy here has little to do with Sotomayor per se? Maybe it's an effort to discredit her future legal opinions once she's approved by Congress. But more importantly, it could be a convenient flash point to rally the shock troops around Obama as a racist, in a broader effort to erode his credibility. The question would then become, just how 'national' in scope is this choir to which bigoted bloviators are preaching?


Whether there is white

Whether there is white racism in America is totally irrelevant to the question of whether Sotomayer, as an individual, is a racist. What Newt said was true: if a white man said the same thing Sotomayer said, he would be branded a racist, regardless of context. And the fact of the matter is, Sotomayer's context actually reinforces the racist message of that brief exerpt. Also, since individuals on the Supreme Court wield power, it does not make sense to discount Sotomayer's racism on account of the fact that Hispanics, in general, have less power. I personally would like to see her confirmed, racist or not, because I think she will perform poorly for the liberal cause.


First, if you read the

First, if you read the sentence that the right wing has tied to make Sotomayor look racist, it begins with "One would hope", giving it a generalized outlook. The statement was not specific and not racist in my own view. There is nothing to apologize for. It does make me wonder about the people who were offended by it and the shallowness of their charactor which obviously couldn't stand up to such an assault against white men. By the way, I am a white male and I agree with the quote. Nothing scares me more than a bunch of white men in suits. They were all there at my trial and I wish Sotomayor had been the judge.


This article moves my me to

This article moves my me to form an irresistible smile and to close my eyes as it stirs my mind with dreamy, realistic visions of America's Freeways, Highways and Byways. Along such are Huge Billboards... On which are new GOP Recruiting Posters, all of which are plastered with a tall picture of a Generic Looking, Late Middle Age Guy with perfect TV Preacher hair and a milky complexion expressing a gritty smirk full of whiter than natural white teeth. He is uniformed in a dull gray $3 million suit colorized with a broad, bright red tie set perfectly into a very white collar. He sits tall and proud in the saddle upon a Small,Miniature Elephant as he points almost meaningfully into the far off wherever. Next to him, in big bold letters are these words--- ''''*COME JOIN THE NEW, LEANER, MEANER THAN EVER REPUBLICAN PARTY. By invitation only.*'''' ............... LOL..!!! :-D


"And the fact of the matter

"And the fact of the matter is, Sotomayer's [sic] context actually reinforces the racist message of that brief exerpt [sicer]." Dude, you sound like Jonah Goldberg saying "Indeed, this is central to my point" about something that completely disproves his point. And it makes exactly as much sense to discount SotomayOR's racism as it does to discount the possibility that Obama might start handing out green cheese from the moon, since her racism is exactly as real as the cheese.


Racism in America...or

Racism in America...or anywhere for that matter is founded on a cognitive disconnect between common sense and self-serving delusion. Between what any fool can see and what someone can fool sufficient numbers into believing. Between simple justice and the law. There is no inherent justice in any law, it is simply a rule that someone with an interest has managed to get installed by a ruling body with sufficient power to enforce it. For much of Americas history, access to that power was denied to a large segment of the society who were not white males and a body of rules was established that accrued power and wealth to white males. It is in their interest to maintain it and someone who is a product of that bias would most likely not be prone to questioning it. Common sense would say that those to whom access to power has been long denied would have a different perspective than those who have held power...and simple justice would call for those who have long been without access to the rule making process to be represented.


The main comfort here

The main comfort here is that if your brand is defined and expressed by Rush Limbaugh and Dick Cheney and Glenn Beck, your brand is losing market share. The bad news is that the hate-speech these guys pump out can germinate in an unbalanced mind and lead to gun-violence. Haven't we seen plenty of examples of that? I have.


The

The Gingrich/Limbaugh/Sessions/Boehner whining and cavailing is proof in itself that Sotomayor was correct in her 2001 statement. Those four white men and their fear and hysteria are the reason we NEED to have better thinking and deeper insights and smarter people on the Supreme bench. Anonymous (Whether there is white. . .) has swallowed the Repugnican line without thinking. Poor anonymous!


The American people have

The American people have indeed awakened from a very deep sleep. They are awake and seeing the right in it's true form, the likes of Limbaugh, Cheney, O'reilly, Gingrich, Hannity, Beck, et al. are an abomination to good Americans everywhere. They are the lunatic fringe, they live in darkness and they preach their dark ideals. Turn your backs on these lunatics and stand up for the truth. These tactics are ugly and dangerous and more and more Americans are wakening to see it.


An Egregious Inequality in

An Egregious Inequality in our health care in this country is the medical neglect to counsel people of color on their increased need for Vitamin D3 supplementation at this Northern latitude, as this group exhibits substantially higher incidence of cancers, autoimmune disease, rheumatoid arthritis, hypertension, diabetes and the myriad of other disorders that mark the deficiency in this quasi vitamin (actually a steroid) which has more than 3,000 receptors in the human genome. Rickets has returned to the Black community because of this (too much indoor activity has pushed the deficiency in black children past the threshold, while white children get barely enough D from brief sun exposure), Ignorance of this basic physiological need has cost countless lives in the higher melanin pigmented populations. I have a hard time believing that this incompetency is entirely accidental, as D deficiency is a grand money maker in the pharmaceutical world, with the Docs being the ones who are carefully trained to never prescribe D to anyone until it is already too late, and even then in inadequate doses. I would like to see a grand wave of lawsuits pressed by blacks who were never advised to supplement D and even told to avoid the sun, and consequently developed the above conditions. It is a grander tragedy than the Tuskegee experiments and has definitely weighed an unequal illness burden on dark skinned individuals in this country.


all she did was admit the

all she did was admit the truth - that being a Latina will factor into her decisions. Just like being a white male factors into the other justices' decisions.... just like who you are and what your experiences are factor into what you do... just like Rush's utter white maleness factors into every word that comes out of his slimy mouth. that's just the way it is. i for one am glad that she will bring out a Latina perspective.


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