LET’S AT LEAST GET THE DEFINITION RIGHT
So, what’s going on? Why the phobia among state legislators, school board members, U.S. Senators, and ordinary citizens? WHAT IS CRT? We’ve studied it, read books and articles about it, and discussed it with academics and other professionals interested in the subject. We also understand the cynical exploitation of an obscure academic concept for political gain. In this and our next post, we’ll unpack the definition of CRT and how it’s been misused.
The History Lesson
In the words of one of its founders, CRT is “a body of legal
scholarship… [developed by theorists] ideologically committed to the struggle
against racism, particularly as institutionalized
in and by law.” Derrick Bell (1930 - 2011) offered that in a 1995 University of Illinois Law Review article titled “Who’s Afraid
of Critical Race Theory?” Professor Bell identified himself
and four others (Richard Delgado, Charles Lawrence, Mari Matsuda, and Patricia
Williams) as CRT’s “founding members.”
We believe it appropriate that we look to Professor Bell’s article and other works by those founding members in defining CRT. We’ve discovered that even we disagree about the proper interpretation of their definitions. This post explores our differences. We agree, however, about how the right has misused CRT in sparking fear and mistrust among Americans, most of them white, for political gain. We’ll explore that next time.
The Definitional
Disagreement
Woodson notes, however, that Professor Bell didn’t include the Delgado/Stefancic addition in that seminal Illinois Law Review article. Because of his prominence in developing CRT, Woodson thinks if he’d wanted to include that, he would have. As importantly, Woodson seesopportunities for mischief in the Delgado/Stefancic addition. To the uninitiated, arguably vague terms like “Enlightenment rationalism” and “neutral principles of constitutional law” leave running room for misguided claims about CRT that have emerged in the current debate.
The Big Six
·
Racism
is ordinary, not aberrational;
·
white
over color serves important psychic and material purposes for the dominant
group;
·
as
a matter of social construction, race and races are products of social thought
and relations;
·
how
a dominant society racializes minority groups differs and depends on shifting
needs, such as labor markets;
·
in
terms of intersectionality and anti-essentialism, each race has its own origins
and ever evolving history; and
·
the
voice of color exists because it’s unlikely whites can convey the history and
experiences of people of color.
Hardly any elementary or secondary schools now teach CRT. No reason exists for fears about school children being indoctrinated to “hate America,” as some have claimed. Misuse of CRT, as columnist Pitts suggested, developed from those who “fear nothing quite so much as the loss of whiteness and its privileges.”
What if students explored America’s racial past guided, in part, by CRT’s six ideas? Would the world end if pupils studied slavery, Jim Crow, income inequality, and criminal justice inequity with these principles in mind? Of course not!
We think it more likely all ethnic groups would come to grips with the negative effects of racism on American laws and norms, resulting in a more sensitive, just, and egalitarian society.
With regard to your last question and concluding sentence, I agree. Thanks for the background explanations of CRT. I found it helpful in understanding.
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