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Now that I
a) am learning how to make simple, slide-show-based videos with "Windows Movie Maker" and
b) have a means to record my own voice-overs,
I'm thinking of making a series of slide-show based videos out of this post My own version of the Bipedal Privilege Backpack (each video focusing on two or three privileges at a time, and illustrated with stick-figure cartoons).
And I'd like to open with a discussion of what "Privilege" is, and what it means to have "an invisible backpack" full of it.
So I'm asking my circle:
What counts as "privilege"? Is privilege always founded in culturally determined biases? Is that the difference between "privilege" and "natural ability"?
and also: Whence the metaphor of the "invisible backpack"? Who thought that up, and what was the inspiration?
a) am learning how to make simple, slide-show-based videos with "Windows Movie Maker" and
b) have a means to record my own voice-overs,
I'm thinking of making a series of slide-show based videos out of this post My own version of the Bipedal Privilege Backpack (each video focusing on two or three privileges at a time, and illustrated with stick-figure cartoons).
And I'd like to open with a discussion of what "Privilege" is, and what it means to have "an invisible backpack" full of it.
So I'm asking my circle:
What counts as "privilege"? Is privilege always founded in culturally determined biases? Is that the difference between "privilege" and "natural ability"?
and also: Whence the metaphor of the "invisible backpack"? Who thought that up, and what was the inspiration?
no subject
Date: 2012-01-03 12:18 am (UTC)*nods*
I'm currently puzzling through a way to explain the concept in a "beginner's language" way, especially for this case of bipedal privilege. To whit (something like):
"Being able to climb a flight of stairs with ease is not a privilege, in and of itself. But it can morph into a privilege when that flight of stairs is the only means provided to enter a desirable space."
no subject
Date: 2012-01-03 12:56 am (UTC)David Blunkett held one of the four most powerful and challenging political jobs (Great Offices of State) in my country when he was Home Secretary. He is also blind. His blindness wasn't an obstacle to him doing his job. BUT many blind people in the same society are denied employment they could do simply because our society has chosen to favour visual methods of "official" communication.
no subject
Date: 2012-01-03 02:09 am (UTC)As she said to me, last year, when J was first entering nursery school: "It's like saying 'We won't teach you the alphabet until you can prove to us you can knit with your toes."
Basically, the whole school system here is aimed at reshaping kids in order to make them fit specific modes of predetermined test-taking methods.
no subject
Date: 2012-01-03 01:31 pm (UTC)