“I don’t think it’s coincidental that the term “microaggression” emerged in popularity during the so-called post-racial era that some people assumed we’d entered with the election of the first Black president. The word “racism” went out of fashion in the liberal haze of racial progress—Obama’s political brand—and conservatives started to treat racism as the equivalent to the N-word, a vicious pejorative rather than a descriptive term. With the word itself becoming radioactive to some, passé to others, some well-meaning Americans started consciously and perhaps unconsciously looking for other terms to identify racism. “Microaggression” became part of a whole vocabulary of old and new words—like “cultural wars” and “stereotype” and “implicit bias” and “economic anxiety” and “tribalism”—that made it easier to talk about or around the R-word. I do not use “microaggression” anymore. I detest the post-racial platform that supported its sudden popularity. I detest its component parts—“micro” and “aggression.” A persistent daily low hum of racist abuse is not minor. I use the term “abuse” because aggression is not as exacting a term.”
Quote by Ibram X. Kendi
Work
How to Be an Antiracist
Browse quotes and source details for this work. more
Author
You May Also Like
“...or said some racist thing out loud at church...”
Source: Liberation Day
Source: Musings from a Small Island: Everything under the Sun
Source: Iftar-e Insaniyat: The First Supper
Source: The Visitor
Source: One Earth, One Humanity vs. the 1%
Source: Iftar-e Insaniyat: The First Supper
Source: With Love From A Blue Rock
Source: Mean Spirit
Source: Tum Dunya Tek Millet: Greatest Country on Earth is Earth