Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Exploration 1: Identity Mapping

"Hi, my name is Martee. You know, like the guy." Yep, according to most people I know, I have a boy's name. Thanks, Mom and Dad.  

Privilege and Oppression. Which Social Identities are privileged by the oppression of others? What are forms of privilege and by oppression? Which social identities are the targets of oppression by unearned privileges granted others? What are forms of oppression experienced by the targets of oppression?

 
Exploring these questions seemed quite fluid as I speedily typed words into the wordle screen for the image seen above. For many years, I feel that I have been aware of such inequalities. However, the most stunning revelation came as I began to see my own “identities” staring back at me from the image produced: an educated middle-class white female (I did mention, I was a girl, right?) from a southern religious background. The truth is I like to exclude myself from this group of "oppressors" and I feel justified in doing so because I do not exploit any power or privilege I might possess. But is that enough? Can I deny parts of my identity that are undeniable? Forget them? Is that possible?

True identity can be neither delivered or denied nor stored as mere information...true identity is something known in one heart and recognized in another.
 -- John Berger, "Concerning Identity"

Below I have mapped out what I consider to be the most significant and influential parts of my identity: 

 Map Key: (I utilized color instead of the varying line model suggested)

Blue - parts of my identity that I had no control over, the environment into which I was born/raised (with the exception of English speaking, needing to be added to this category as well) - primary dimensions.

Pink - distinctive innate characteristics that are mine, a part of my DNA (I originally included English speaking solely in this group, however, after some thought, it overlaps with the blue) - primary dimensions.

Orange - identities that I have assumed based on personal choices, ideals, and convictions - secondary dimensions

Yellow - geographical places that I believe have deeply impacted my identity at the corresponding stages of my life (and beyond) - secondary dimensions. 

The idea of privilege. Coming from a lower/middle class farming family in a very rural part of Louisiana, I never felt particularly "privileged" growing up. I always "had" less than others; however, my parents valued education and instilled within each one of us the importance of working hard. To this day, I have always taken pride in that I was the first generation of my family to go to college and complete a degree (one that I am still paying for) within a field that I have great interest and passion, the Arts.

With that said, I do not recall feeling a wall of separation between myself and what I wanted to achieve. Being white was a privilege. Being educated offered privilege and a small degree of power. Being an educated white middle class in the South, I was afforded opportunities (privileges) that many of my African American counterparts were not. 

Oppression. If I was oppressed, it was because I was female (despite my name). My family had definitive gender expectations that extended into all aspects of life, right down to the "chores" we were assigned. My arm still bears a scar from a rusty barbed wire fence that reminds me of my early "rebellion" against these assigned roles. My attitude was simply to prove that I could do anything my brothers could do...thus the scar.

My identity. Parts were chosen for me. Others I have selected and shaped. Who I am today is different from the person I was yesterday and will be tomorrow. In looking back through the years, I am always a bit surprised at how much I have grown, shifted, changed. How different I look from my roots. A primary example for me is race politics. Although I grew up in the rural South, the race politics that exist stood out as injustices to me from my first awareness of them. However, as Weedon describes, I took a self-proclaimed "liberal, colour blind position which claimed to see no difference" (Weedon, p 2). This position seemed sufficient until 1) I had children and 2) I moved back to the South after a decade long hiatus.  At which point, I realized that this passive approach presupposes difference as unimportant rather than something to be celebrated. Differences are vital to the understanding, appreciating, accepting and nurturing of one another. Weir suggests "a model of identity not as sameness, but as an historical process of holding together; not through stasis but through transformation. ... [and] that a transformative identity politics must incorporate both relations of identification and recognition of relations of power: thus, transformative identity politics are politics of self-critique and self-transformation, and transformation of a 'we'" (Weir, 2008, p 112). Discovering that "we" has been my challenge over the past year. Searching for how to identify with a collective, rather than simply as an individual. To which "we" do I belong? How does that redefine my identity? Alter it? Add to it?

The courses I teach are completely online with little to no physical connections between my students and myself. We all exist in a virtual world of texts, emails, documents, voice over slides, and the occasional phone call (the most common link to the non-virtual world). With a name like "Martee," I am often mistaken for a male instructor. I find myself in a constant state of self-critique and self-transformation in order to shape the way that my students "see" me through our interactions in each of my courses. The reason I teach? So that hopefully my students will more successfully navigate these spaces than I currently do.

Resources: 

Weir, A. (2008). Global feminism and transformative identity politics. Hypatia, 23(4), 110-133.

Video: Concerning Identity (9:25 min.) A reading by John Berger.

Weedon, C. (2002). Key issues in postcolonial feminism: A Western perspective. Gender Forum: An International Journal for Gender Studies.

4 comments:

  1. I could have written your "Idea of Privilege" paragraph minus the word farming and swapping Louisiana for Pennsylvania and South for North. Yankee doppelgänger?

    The concept of virtual visual art courses is so foreign and intriguing to me. The closest experience I've had was taking a Philadelphia Architecture course online while attending college in Philadelphia. It was really a correspondence course with the professor and had no interaction among students.
    What grade level(s) do you teach? If it is in fact a visual art course, how do you promote learning through group participation, critique, and conversation? I'm interested in adding a technology component to for my upper elementary students to share their work and have group critique, hopefully allowing the more reserved students in class have their voice heard. I'd appreciate your feedback on the technology you use.

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  2. Hi Martee,
    I have to say, I love your name! I find names and their meaning highly interesting and how it shapes our identity. I often wonder how the world will accept/react to the most popular names given to children today like “Apple” or “River”. I wonder if parents choose these names because they are gender neutral.
    My name conjures many questions about my ancestry yet yours seems to be a subject of confusion as you have to explain to people that their preconceived idea of who you are based off your name is not true. It’s interesting to note that women at one point in time submitted work under male names. A friend of mine explained her Superintendent uses her middle name because it is “masculine” to get more respect in the business world. I wonder, have you ever received any privileges for have a “male” name? When I first met my brother’s girlfriend she introduced herself as Ty, and found out later on her name was Tyler. She loves her name, but she finds it does have its challenges.
    Glad to “see” you again in another class!
    Nicole

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  3. Hi Martee,

    I found your assignment of primary dimensions interesting (indeed, can one really help being an extrovert/introvert?) And I, too, have wondered if it possible to turn a blind eye to certain dimensions of my identity to which I would rather not be aligned.

    It sounds like we are experiencing similar issues of configuring identity after relocation, and I'm curious to know more about your experiences. Have you experienced any new bias patterns, be it gender wars or otherwise? Have people always mistaken your name to be masculine, or is this a new problem in your new locale?

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  4. Hi Martee, I enjoyed the your layout of the identity map. I have a very femine name, but I was a little "tom-boy" growing up. Where did that ever come from? "tom-boy"? Anyway, I was reading back on your blog tonight and related it back to my response to nicole's blog noting what's in a name? and is there an expectation when naming a child?
    I can also relate to your segment on the idea of privilege. " I never felt particularly "privileged" growing up. I always "had" less than others; however, my parents valued education and instilled within each one of us the importance of working hard. To this day, I have always taken pride in that I was the first generation of my family to go to college and complete a degree (one that I am still paying for) within a field that I have great interest and passion, the Arts." - Me too:) I really had to work hard for everything that I wanted in life. My brother and I are the first to go to college, which we are still paying for, and we "went without" many times growing up. I had to re-adjust my thinking when in college to that I was "priveledged" and actually perpetuating a society that thought it should be so if I didn't recognize it. I thought...priveldged??? But the access to so many things were at my fingertips that weren't at others, for all sorts of reasons and acts of oppression. To make this power and priveldge shift/transformation, you are correct, "identity politics must incorporate both relations of identification and recognition of relations of power".
    Heather

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