White Tears Brown Scars

How White Feminism Betrays Women of Color

304 pages

English language

Published Dec. 16, 2020 by Orion Publishing Group, Limited.

ISBN:
978-1-3987-0308-7
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

5 stars (2 reviews)

For readers of White Fragility, White Tears/Brown Scars is an explosive book of history and cultural criticism that argues that white feminism, from Australia to Zimbabwe to the United States, has been a weapon of white supremacy and patriarchy deployed against black and indigenous women, and women of color.

Taking us from the slave era, when white women fought in court to keep their slaves, through the centuries of colonialism, when they offered a soft face for brutal tactics, to the modern workplace, White Tears/Brown Scars tells a charged story of white women’s active participation in campaigns of oppression. It offers a long overdue validation of the experiences of women of color.

Discussing subjects as varied as The Hunger Games, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the viral "BBQ Becky" video, and 19th century lynchings of Mexicans in the American Southwest, Ruby Hamad undertakes a new investigation of gender and race. She shows how …

2 editions

A powerfully argued and detailed survey

5 stars

White Tears / Brown Scars is a powerfully argued and detailed survey of how white women as a group have fought for increased rights and power for themselves, claiming successes for all women, but actually achieving progess more often than not at the expense of women of colour. Hamad looks back through several centuries of oppressive behaviours to prove her point historically and, most importantly, for all protestations to the contrary, demonstrates how little has actually changed below the surface in the twenty-first century. I was fascinated and appalled by her explanations of how women of colour have typically been portrayed as the exact opposite of any era's prevailing white morality in order to devalue them as people, and how white women generally were and still are active in maintaining the idea of white Western culture as a gold standard, bemoaning our position as lesser than white men yet jealously …