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Collective Victimhood and the “Color Line” Collective Victimhood and the “Color Line”
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A Critical Race Psychology Perspective on the Stigmatization of Black Victims A Critical Race Psychology Perspective on the Stigmatization of Black Victims
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Implications of Critical Race Theory for Collective Victimhood Implications of Critical Race Theory for Collective Victimhood
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References References
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15 A Critical Race Reading of Collective Victimhood: The Precarious Case of Black Americans
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Published:May 2020
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Abstract
This chapter examines the cultural psychological processes that contribute to the delegitimization of Black victimhood in the United States. Drawing on a critical race psychology perspective that focuses on societal processes through which racism is maintained and reproduced, the authors examine the precariousness of claims of Black victimhood in the United States. The same mechanisms that maintain racist structures also delegitimize and deny Black victimhood. These processes include individualism and color-blind ideologies, victim blaming, the misrepresentation and dehumanization of Black victims, the assumption of White innocence and Whites’ moral disengagement from responsibility for racism, and claims of victimhood among Whites, especially in response to perceived threats of gains among minority groups. Thus, collective victimhood becomes precarious for Black Americans in that it is used as a tool of further oppression by others, instead of a source of support from third parties. The “benefits” of collective victimhood are not afforded to all groups.
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