There
may not be a word in American conservatism more hated right now than
“intersectionality.” On the right, intersectionality is seen as “the new caste
system” placing nonwhite, non-heterosexual people on top.
To many
conservatives, intersectionality means “because you’re a minority, you get
special standards, special treatment in the eyes of some.” It “promotes
solipsism at the personal level and division at the social level.” It represents
a form of feminism that “puts a label on you. It tells you how oppressed you
are. It tells you what you’re allowed to say, what you’re allowed to think.”
Intersectionality is thus “really dangerous” or a “conspiracy theory of
victimization.”
This is
a highly unusual level of disdain for a word that until several years ago was a
legal term in relative obscurity outside academic circles. It was coined in
1989 by professor Kimberlé Crenshaw to describe how race, class, gender, and
other individual characteristics “intersect” with one another and overlap.
“Intersectionality” has, in a sense, gone viral over the past half-decade,
resulting in a backlash from the right.
In my
conversations with right-wing critics of intersectionality, I’ve found that
what upsets them isn’t the theory itself. Indeed, they largely agree that it
accurately describes the way people from different backgrounds encounter the
world. The lived experiences — and experiences of discrimination — of a black
woman will be different from those of a white woman, or a black man, for
example. They object to its implications, uses, and, most importantly, its
consequences, what some conservatives view as the upending of racial and
cultural hierarchies to create a new one.
But
Crenshaw isn’t seeking to build a racial hierarchy with black women at the top.
Through her work, she’s attempting to demolish racial hierarchies altogether.
I met
Kimberlé Crenshaw in her office at Columbia Law School on Manhattan’s Upper
West Side on a rainy day in January. Crenshaw, who is a professor at both
Columbia and the University of California Los Angeles, had just returned from
an overseas trip to speak at the Sorbonne and the London School of Economics.
Crenshaw
is a 60-year-old Ohio native who has spent more than 30 years studying civil
rights, race, and racism. In her mildly overheated office, the professor was
affable and friendly as she answered questions while law students entered her
office intermittently as they prepared for a panel discussion coincidentally
titled “Mythbusting Intersectionality” scheduled for that evening.
But it’s
not just academic panels where the fight over what intersectionality is — or
isn’t — plays out. Intersectionality has become a dividing line between the
left and the right. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) tweets that “the future is
female [and] intersectional.” The Daily Wire’s Ben Shapiro, meanwhile, posts
videos with headlines like “Is intersectionality the biggest problem in
America?”
The
current debate over intersectionality is really three debates: one based on
what academics like Crenshaw actually mean by the term, one based on how
activists seeking to eliminate disparities between groups have interpreted the
term, and a third on how some conservatives are responding to its use by those
activists.
Crenshaw
has watched all this with no small measure of surprise. “This is what happens
when an idea travels beyond the context and the content,” she said.
But
those who have worked with her have seen how she can ask tough questions and
demand hard answers, particularly on the subject of race, even of her closest
allies. Mari Matsuda, a law professor at the University of Hawaii who has
worked with Crenshaw on issues relating to race and racism for years, told me,
“She is not one to back away from making people uncomfortable.”
I also
spoke with Kevin Minofu, a former student of Crenshaw’s who is now a
postdoctoral research scholar at the African American Policy Forum, a think
tank co-founded by Crenshaw in 1996 with a focus on eliminating structural
inequality. In Crenshaw’s civil rights law class, he said, “what she did in the
course was really imbue a very deep understanding of American society, American
legal culture, and American power systems.”
Minofu
described Crenshaw’s understanding of intersectionality as “not really
concerned with shallow questions of identity and representation but ... more
interested in the deep structural and systemic questions about discrimination
and inequality.”
To
understand what intersectionality is, and what it has become, you have to look
at Crenshaw’s body of work over the past 30 years on race and civil rights. A
graduate of Cornell University, Harvard University, and the University of
Wisconsin, Crenshaw has focused in much of her research on the concept of
critical race theory.
As she
detailed in an article written for the Baffler in 2017, critical race theory
emerged in the 1980s and ’90s among a group of legal scholars in response to
what seemed to Crenshaw and her colleagues like a false consensus: that
discrimination and racism in the law were irrational, and “that once the
irrational distortions of bias were removed, the underlying legal and
socioeconomic order would revert to a neutral, benign state of impersonally
apportioned justice.”
This
was, she argued, a delusion as comforting as it was dangerous. Crenshaw didn’t
believe racism ceased to exist in 1965 with the passage of the Civil Rights
Act, nor that racism was a mere multi-century aberration that, once corrected
through legislative action, would no longer impact the law or the people who
rely upon it.
There
was no “rational” explanation for the racial wealth gap that existed in 1982
and persists today, or for minority underrepresentation in spaces that were
purportedly based on “colorblind” standards. Rather, as Crenshaw wrote,
discrimination remains because of the “stubborn endurance of the structures of
white dominance” — in other words, the American legal and socioeconomic order
was largely built on racism.
Before
the arguments raised by the originators of critical race theory, there wasn’t
much criticism describing the way structures of law and society could be
intrinsically racist, rather than simply distorted by racism while otherwise
untainted with its stain. So there weren’t many tools for understanding how
race worked in those institutions.
That
brings us to the concept of intersectionality, which emerged from the ideas
debated in critical race theory. Crenshaw first publicly laid out her theory of
intersectionality in 1989, when she published a paper in the University of
Chicago Legal Forum titled “Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex.”
You can read that paper here.
The
paper centers on three legal cases that dealt with the issues of both racial
discrimination and sex discrimination: DeGraffenreid v. General Motors, Moore
v. Hughes Helicopter, Inc., and Payne v. Travenol. In each case, Crenshaw
argued that the court’s narrow view of discrimination was a prime example of
the “conceptual limitations of ... single-issue analyses” regarding how the law
considers both racism and sexism. In other words, the law seemed to forget that
black women are both black and female, and thus subject to discrimination on
the basis of both race, gender, and often, a combination of the two.
For
example, DeGraffenreid v. General Motors was a 1976 case in which five black
women sued General Motors for a seniority policy that they argued targeted
black women exclusively. Basically, the company simply did not hire black women
before 1964, meaning that when seniority-based layoffs arrived during an early
1970s recession, all the black women hired after 1964 were subsequently laid
off. A policy like that didn’t fall under just gender or just race
discrimination. But the court decided that efforts to bind together both racial
discrimination and sex discrimination claims — rather than sue on the basis of
each separately — would be unworkable.
As
Crenshaw details, in May 1976, Judge Harris Wangelin ruled against the
plaintiffs, writing in part that “black women” could not be considered a
separate, protected class within the law, or else it would risk opening a
“Pandora’s box” of minorities who would demand to be heard in the law:
“The
legislative history surrounding Title VII does not indicate that the goal of
the statute was to create a new classification of ‘black women’ who would have
greater standing than, for example, a black male. The prospect of the creation
of new classes of protected minorities, governed only by the mathematical principles
of permutation and combination, clearly raises the prospect of opening the
hackneyed Pandora’s box.”
Crenshaw
argues in her paper that by treating black women as purely women or purely
black, the courts, as they did in 1976, have repeatedly ignored specific
challenges that face black women as a group.
“Intersectionality
was a prism to bring to light dynamics within discrimination law that weren’t
being appreciated by the courts,” Crenshaw said. “In particular, courts seem to
think that race discrimination was what happened to all black people across
gender and sex discrimination was what happened to all women, and if that is
your framework, of course, what happens to black women and other women of color
is going to be difficult to see.”
But then
something unexpected happened. Crenshaw’s theory went mainstream, arriving in
the Oxford English Dictionary in 2015 and gaining widespread attention during
the 2017 Women’s March, an event whose organizers noted how women’s
“intersecting identities” meant that they were “impacted by a multitude of
social justice and human rights issues.” As Crenshaw told me, laughing, “the
thing that’s kind of ironic about intersectionality is that it had to leave
town” — the world of the law — “in order to get famous.”
She
compared the experience of seeing other people talking about intersectionality
to an “out-of-body experience,” telling me, “Sometimes I’ve read things that
say, ‘Intersectionality, blah, blah, blah,’ and then I’d wonder, ‘Oh, I wonder
whose intersectionality that is,’ and then I’d see me cited, and I was like,
‘I’ve never written that. I’ve never said that. That is just not how I think
about intersectionality.’”
She
added, “What was puzzling is that usually with ideas that people take
seriously, they actually try to master them, or at least try to read the
sources that they are citing for the proposition. Often, that doesn’t happen
with intersectionality, and there are any number of theories as to why that’s
the case, but what many people have heard or know about intersectionality comes
more from what people say than what they’ve actually encountered themselves.”
Beginning
in 2015 and escalating ever since, the conservative response to
intersectionality has ranged from mild amusement to outright horror. In 2017,
writer Andrew Sullivan argued that intersectionality was a religion of sorts:
In his view, intersectionality “posits a classic orthodoxy through which all of
human experience is explained — and through which all speech must be filtered.
Its version of original sin is the power of some identity groups over others.
To overcome this sin, you need first to confess, i.e., ‘check your privilege,’
and subsequently live your life and order your thoughts in a way that keeps
this sin at bay.”
When you
talk to conservatives about the term itself, however, they’re more measured.
They say the concept of intersectionality — the idea that people experience
discrimination differently depending on their overlapping identities — isn’t
the problem. Because, as David French, a writer for National Review who
described intersectionality as “the dangerous faith” in 2018, told me, the idea
is more or less indisputable.
“An
African American man is going to experience the world differently than an
African American woman,” French told me. “Somebody who is LGBT is going to
experience the world differently than somebody who’s straight. Somebody who’s
LGBT and African American is going to experience the world differently than
somebody who’s LGBT and Latina. It’s sort of this commonsense notion that
different categories of people have different kinds of experience.”
What
many conservatives object to is not the term but its application on college
campuses and beyond. Conservatives believe that it could be (or is being) used
against them, making them the victims, in a sense, of a new form of overlapping
oppression. To them, intersectionality isn’t just describing a hierarchy of
oppression but, in practice, an inversion of it, such that being a white
straight cisgender man is made anathema.
“Where
the fight begins,” French said, “is when intersectionality moves from
descriptive to prescriptive.” It is as if intersectionality were a language
with which conservatives had no real problem, until it was spoken.
In a
2018 clip for Prager University, an online platform for conservative
educational videos, pundit Ben Shapiro described intersectionality as “a form
of identity politics in which the value of your opinion depends on how many
victim groups you belong to. At the bottom of the totem pole is the person
everybody loves to hate: the straight white male.” At the end of the video,
Shapiro concludes, “But what do I know? I’m just a straight white male.”
In an
interview, Shapiro gave me a definition of intersectionality that seemed far
afield from Crenshaw’s understanding of her own theory. “I would define
intersectionality as, at least the way that I’ve seen it manifest on college
campuses, and in a lot of the political left, as a hierarchy of victimhood in
which people are considered members of a victim class by virtue of membership
in a particular group, and at the intersection of various groups lies the
ascent on the hierarchy.”
And in
that new “hierarchy of victimhood,” Shapiro told me, white men would be at the
bottom. “In other words, if you are a woman, then you are more victimized than
a man, and if you are black, then you’re more victimized than if you were
white. If you’re a black woman, you are more victimized than if you are a black
man.”
I had
sent Shapiro Crenshaw’s 1989 paper prior to our conversation. The paper,
Shapiro said, “seems relatively unobjectionable.” He just didn’t think it was
particularly relevant. “I first started hearing about this theory in the
context of a lot of the discussions on campus, the ‘check your privilege’
discussions. That was the first place that I came across it, and that’s
honestly the place that most people first came across it in the public eye.”
Crenshaw
said conservative criticisms of intersectionality weren’t really aimed at the
theory. If they were, and not largely focused on whom intersectionality would
benefit or burden, conservatives wouldn’t use their own identities as part of
their critiques. (Shapiro’s tongue-in-cheek disclaimer of “I’m just a straight
white male,” for example.) Identities simply wouldn’t matter — unless, of
course, they actually do, and the people at the top of our current identity
hierarchy are more concerned about losing their spot than they are with
eliminating those hierarchies altogether.
“When
you’re going to sign on to a particular critique by rolling out your identity,
exactly how was your identity politics different from what you’re trying to
critique?” Crenshaw said. “It’s just a matter of who it is, that’s what you
seem to be most concerned about.”
There’s
nothing new about this, she continued. “There have always been people, from the
very beginning of the civil rights movement, who had denounced the creation of
equality rights on the grounds that it takes something away from them.”
To
Crenshaw, the most common critiques of intersectionality — that the theory
represents a “new caste system” — are actually affirmations of the theory’s
fundamental truth: that individuals have individual identities that intersect
in ways that impact how they are viewed, understood, and treated. Black women
are both black and women, but because they are black women, they endure
specific forms of discrimination that black men, or white women, might not.
But
Crenshaw said that contrary to her critics’ objections, intersectionality isn’t
“an effort to create the world in an inverted image of what it is now.” Rather,
she said, the point of intersectionality is to make room “for more advocacy and
remedial practices” to create a more egalitarian system.
In
short, Crenshaw doesn’t want to replicate existing power dynamics and cultural
structures just to give people of color power over white people, for example.
She wants to get rid of those existing power dynamics altogether — changing the
very structures that undergird our politics, law, and culture in order to level
the playing field.
Still,
as Crenshaw told me, “plenty of people choose not to assume that the prism [of
intersectionality] necessarily demands anything in particular of them.”
The
conservatives I spoke to understood quite well what intersectionality is.
What’s more, they didn’t seem bothered by intersectionality as legal concept,
or intersectionality as an idea. (I asked Shapiro this question directly, and
he said, “the original articulation of the idea by Crenshaw is accurate and not
a problem.”) Rather, they’re deeply concerned by the practice of
intersectionality, and moreover, what they concluded intersectionality would
ask, or demand, of them and of society.
Indeed,
intersectionality is intended to ask a lot of individuals and movements alike,
requiring that efforts to address one form of oppression take others into
account. Efforts to fight racism would require examining other forms of
prejudice (like anti-Semitism, for example); efforts to eliminate gender
disparities would require examining how women of color experience gender bias
differently from white women (and how nonwhite men do too, compared to white
men).
This
raises big, difficult questions, ones that many people (even those who purport
to abide by “intersectionalist” values) are unprepared, or unwilling, to
answer. Once we acknowledge the role of race and racism, what do we do about
it? And who should be responsible for addressing racism, anyway?
Intersectionality
operates as both the observance and analysis of power imbalances, and the tool
by which those power imbalances could be eliminated altogether. And the
observance of power imbalances, as is so frequently true, is far less
controversial than the tool that could eliminate them.
The
intersectionality wars. By Jane Coaston. Vox ,
May 28, 2019.
also
interesting
“A mere
eight years later, white voters tossed the historic breakthrough of 2008 into
the dustbin of history, alongside other half-digested political trendlets, like
“the year of the woman” and “the peace dividend.” The symbolic breakthrough of
Obama’s election has plainly given way to a terrifying new political order that
is anything but post-racial. White voters overwhelmingly rallied to the
presidential candidacy of Donald Trump, a leader whose racist worldview is
emblazoned at the base of his career in the same way that his name is plastered
across his global real estate empire.”
Kimberlé
Crenshaw on race in the American political
life of the last decade.
Race to
the Bottom. By Kimberly Crenshaw. The Baffler , June 2017.
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