Jan. 24th, 2012

capri0mni: A black Skull & Crossbones with the Online Disability Pride Flag as a background (Default)
Back on December 4, 2011, [livejournal.com profile] haddayr posted this link to "The Invisible Backpack of Able-Bodied Privilege Checklist" over at the B-tch on Wheels blog:

http://exposingableism.wordpress.com/2009/10/12/the-invisible-backpack-of-able-bodied-privilege-checklist/

And I thought it was a good list... but what its author called "able-bodied privilege" was actually specific to bipedal privilege, and completely skipped over issues of fatigue, pain, and sensory disabilities (like blindness).

So I came up with my own list, here: http://capriuni.dreamwidth.org/608976.html

And now, I'm contemplating putting it up in video format on YouTube, so more people can see it (maybe a series of short videos, so I don't have to make it --and folks don't have to watch it--all at once).

I want to start by talking about the idea of privilege, itself. The thing I've noticed is that some people think that when you point out they have privileges that you're accusing them of being a bad person, because of it, and they get defensive and shut down. So I want to reassure people that that's not what I mean -- after all, white people can't help being white, able-bodied people and cisgendered people can't help being white or cisgendered. So it's not the having privilege that's blame-worthy, it's how you use it that matters.

And I want to use some metaphor other than "invisible backpack (knapsack)," because that metaphor was coined by Peggy McIntosh, and I'm not her.

And then I thought of comparing socially ingrained privilege, which is not talked about much, with the privileges that come with fame, which are talked about a lot (And, thus, a more familiar idea, and less scary). I realize this has its own drawbacks, but... tell me what you think?

'Golden Ticket and Velvet Rope' Prospective introduction to the idea of social privilege (Instead of 'invisible backpack' metaphor) )

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capri0mni: A black Skull & Crossbones with the Online Disability Pride Flag as a background (Default)
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