White tears brown scars How white feminism betrays women of color

Ruby Hamad

Book - 2020

"Taking us from the slave era, when white women fought in court to keep "ownership" of their slaves, through the centuries of colonialism, when they offered a soft face for brutal tactics, to the modern workplace, White Tears/Brown Scars tells a charged story of white women's active participation in campaigns of oppression. It offers a long overdue validation of the experiences of women of color."--

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2nd Floor 305.8/Hamad Due Dec 2, 2024
Subjects
Published
New York : Catapult [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Ruby Hamad (author)
Item Description
Originally published in Australia in 2019 by Melbourne University Press.
Physical Description
xvii, 284 pages ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 271-284).
ISBN
9781948226745
  • Author's Note
  • Part 1. The Setup
  • Introduction: White Tears
  • 1. Lewd Jezebels, Exotic Orientals, Princess Pocahontas: How Colonialism Rigged the Game Against Women of Color
  • 2. Angry Sapphires, Bad Arabs, Dragon Ladies: Boxed In by the Binary
  • 3. Only White Damsels Can Be in Distress
  • Part 2. The Payoff
  • 4. When Tears Become Weapons: White Womanhood's Silent War on Women of Color
  • 5. There Is No Sisterhood: White Women and Racism
  • 6. Pets or Threats: White Feminism and the Reassertion of Whiteness
  • 7. The Rise of Righteous Racism: From Classwashing to the Lovejoy Trap
  • 8. The Privilege and Peril of Passing: Colorism, Anti-Blackness, and the Yearning to Be White
  • Conclusion: Brown Scars
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Journalist Hamad debuts with a searing and wide-ranging condemnation of "strategic White Womanhood" and "the historical debasement of women of color" in Western culture. Citing her own experiences as an Arab woman working in the "suffocatingly white Australian media space" and those of other "brown and black women" who have been routinely disbelieved, exoticized, or accused of bullying by white women, Hamad contends that the tears of white women are "a weapon that prevents people of color from being able to assert themselves or to effectively challenge white racism and alter the fundamental inequalities built into the system." She analyzes cultural archetypes, including "the lascivious black Jezebel" and "the submissive China Doll," that inhibit women of color, and compares the actions of "BBQ Beckys" who call the police on Black people for noncrimes to the lynching of Black men for "perceived transgressions against the virtuous bodies of white women." Hamad also documents the exclusion of Black women from the suffrage movement and explains why white women's inroads into white male power structures don't benefit women of color. Skillfully blending autobiography, history, and cultural criticism, Hamad makes a devastating case against white women's complicity in systemic racism. This insistent and incisive call for change belongs in the contemporary feminist canon. (Oct.)

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Review by Library Journal Review

Hamad explains how white feminists reinforce racism and seek to maintain and advance their own privileges, often at the expense of Black women. Pairs well with Hood Feminism.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An exhaustive look at how White women perpetuate White supremacy at the expense of women of color. Journalist Hamad picks up where her 2018 Guardian Australia article left off, delving into why White women's comfort is prioritized and their tears "weaponized" to further marginalize women of color. "When challenged by a woman of color," she writes, "a White woman will often lean into her racial privilege to turn the tables and accuse the other woman of hurting, attacking, or bullying her. This process almost always siphons the sympathy and support of any onlookers to the apparently distressed White woman, helping her avoid any accountability that may be due and leaving the woman of color out in the cold, often with no realistic option--particularly if it is a workplace interaction--but to accept blame and apologize." Whether responding to indignities such as White women petting their hair or to loss of career opportunities, women of color are treated as aggressors when they challenge bigotry. The author painstakingly documents how, historically and contemporarily, White women function both as "damsels in distress" and as defenders of White supremacy. From slavery and lynching to forced Indigenous child removals, White women have been "co-conspirators" with White men in racism and violence, often under the guise of protecting White womanhood. With scholarly but highly engaging prose, Hamad details White women's roles in oppression across continents, a much-needed history lesson for those inclined to reduce racism to individual behavior. The author clearly examines how this legacy of centuries of racial violence and White settler colonialism plays out today in the lives of Black, Asian, Latina, Indian, Muslim, Arab, and Indigenous women from around the world, told through their collective geopolitical histories and personal anecdotes. For readers truly interested in dismantling White supremacy, this is a must-read. An extraordinary book for anyone who wishes to pay more than lip service to truly inclusive, intersectional feminism. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.