Race, class matter in today’s LGBT politics
By Josh Friedberg
When you think of a gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender person, what race and class do you associate with that image?
In 2000, World War II historian Allan Bérubé published an essay examining the perception of, in particular, gay men and the consequences of that perception.
Bérubé said that when asked the above question, his students invariably responded that gay men were perceived as “white and well-to-do.”
Despite progress in LGBT rights, 10 years after the publication of “How Gay Stays White, and What Kind of White it Stays,” some things haven’t changed.
Regardless of exceptions, the majority of people, at least in the U.S., still perceive LGBT people as white and wealthy. And this image stays ingrained not only for overt homophobes but within LGBT culture as well.
Bérubé examined how the image of gays as monolithically privileged presented itself in attempts to both assimilate LGBT people into mainstream society and curtail LGBT rights. He discussed what he called the “selling” of gay whiteness in order to garner favor from corporate and governmental authorities, as well as the use of “race analogies” comparing sexual marginalization to racial marginalization.
What happened was politicians voted against gay rights measures, including in the battle over gays in the military, saying that gays already have privilege, an idea which only makes sense if you conceive of LGBT people as homogeneously white and wealthy.
And today organizations like the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) still sell the image of assimilation to try to prove LGBT people are “just like everybody else.” This has included efforts like the HRC Buying for Equality guide, which encourages consumers to support LGBT-friendly corporations.
To be sure, this sounds like a good idea, but the HRC has given awards to companies with documented histories of racist practices, like Abercrombie, separating sexual oppression from racial or class-based oppression.
This example points to a larger problem: such an assimilationist ethic, which has ignored the overlap between race, class, and sexuality, has resulted in the marginalization of LGBT people of color from a discourse on LGBT rights.
To be fair, unprecedented numbers of LGBT professors of color have gained prominence in the academy over the last two decades, so that is certainly progress.
But before Proposition 8 passed in 2008, banning gay marriage in California, LGBT activists of color noted racial discrimination within anti-Prop. 8 organizations silencing their ideas.
As Kai Wright noted in an article for ColorLines magazine, these activists foresaw the passing of Prop. 8 and tried to institute changes in the assimilationist strategies used to attempt to gain votes, but to no avail.
And yet the selling of gays as white and wealthy continues.
A few years ago Dwight A. McBride, a gay black professor who is currently dean at University of Illinois at Chicago, published an essay on “the gay marketplace of desire,” referring to pornography, print media, online dating, and other institutions which largely cater to white male consumers, often using racist stereotypes about various gay men of color. This is undoubtedly still the case; one look through a mainstream LGBT publication or Web site will confirm that.
And race analogies continue as well: after Prop. 8, one such magazine, The Advocate, published a cover story declaring, “Gay is the New Black.” The story’s author did not interview or mention a single gay black person and posed LGBT rights and black rights as comparable.
The problem is that only white people can compare any oppression to racial oppression; blacks, for example, can’t say their oppression is like racial oppression, because they are already racially oppressed.
In addition, the myth that LGBT people are homogeneously white and wealthy yields a number of other myths. One is that some people of color have called homosexuality “a white thing,” dismissing the idea that LGBT people are in their communities.
Another is the myth that LGBT people should be grateful for what they have — which could hold true if you’re talking about race and class privilege among white and upper-class LGBT folks.
However, such a myth ignores the rights that LGBT people have long been denied, ones that heterosexuals can take for granted, including the rights to marry, to not face employment discrimination based around sexuality or gender identity, or to know hate crimes against you can be treated as hate crimes.
So what I am asking all of us to do is to challenge the stereotypes that are so prevalent, to acknowledge race and class along with sexuality and gender identity and to help break down how gay stays white.
Bérubé’s death in 2007 should not leave this part of his legacy unfulfilled: we must educate ourselves, learning about racism and classism in addition to homophobia, sexism and other types of oppression.
We must learn that ignoring or separating any type of oppression from another is a result of privileged ignorance, and it will remain so as long as gay stays white.
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