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Posted: 2018-10-14T12:00:16Z | Updated: 2024-02-05T08:30:05Z Black Women Have Never Had The Privilege Of Rage | HuffPost

Black Women Have Never Had The Privilege Of Rage

We've been mad for decades and invisible and silenced for equally as long.
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A group of women wear black veils and black tape over their mouths outside of the fourth day of Brett Kavanaugh's hearing before members of the Senate Judiciary Committee on Sept. 7, 2018.
Congressional Quarterly via Getty Images

The past several weeks have sparked an unprecedented conversation about womens collective fury in this #MeToo, #WhyIDidntReport and post-Kavanaugh hearings era. Three recent books and a flurry of op-eds , essays  and social media energy has everyone talking about rage in a brand new way.

This is good news for women. But whats been blatantly missing from mainstream dialogue is a nuanced understanding of how rage is perceived by and received from black women and whether this alleged new moment in the ongoing liberation of women will actually be an equitable one.

Black women have been furious for decades, and our collective rage hasnt exactly led to any revolutionary change in our lived experience. Quite the opposite: The angry black woman trope is a powerful tool thats been used to dehumanize and silence black women for decades.

The dangerous stereotype of the black female as an angry, finger-snapping, emasculating, neck-moving, oh no you didnt-spewing being has done deep harm. Our anger has never been viewed as legitimate or warranted due to unfair treatment; instead, its been twisted into a pathology.

White womens rage is given prominent position as a healthy exercise of power acquisition, says Dionne Grayman, a career educator and the co-founder of We Run Brownsville, an organization that uses walk/runs and an active activism model to empower women in their physical, mental and emotional wellness. It is their right to be angry in the face of their oppression.

She adds: Given the same consideration, though, black womens anger has to be tempered and detached from the fire and fury of white women to make other people feel comfortable. White women get to be mad and are not asked to explain why. Our anger has to pass the smell test.

As a result, black women have been limited in how we can forcefully and convincingly advocate for the issues that matter to us. Our female fury is seen as threatening, not radical as disconnected from reason, devoid of any intellectual underpinnings. The weight of being viewed as angry, often by white women, has prevented us from demanding an equal seat at the policymaking table.

Trust me: Black women have been in a legitimate rage for decades and invisible and silenced for just as long.

The story being told and sold about us as angry women is so pervasive its accepted as a cultural norm. In 2014, TV critic Alessandra Stanley began an article about Shonda Rhimes , the creator of Scandal, Greys Anatomy and How to Get Away With Murder (and one of the most successful women in television production) by suggesting her autobiography should be called How to Get Away With Being an Angry Black Woman. The outraged response from readers was immediate and severe. But more to the point, not one skilled editor picked up on the blatant perpetuation of an insidious stereotype.

Being labeled as angry and harsh ensures black women arent seen as real human beings with a full suite of emotions, including fear, fragility and vulnerability. When the media, pop culture and society have already framed you as angry, you live every moment trying to disprove a lie. And because we know you think we are angry, we diminish ourselves to appear happy, passive or docile.

This paradigm goes all the way back to slavery, when black people had to smile in front of the master and other oppressors while hiding their pain and hatred. Later, black women adorned smiles as they took loving care of white womens children and homes while masking the emotional pain and frustration of having to ignore their own children.

I feel these stereotypes every day as a mother. I recently showed up at my daughters school to address a major issue: She was called the N-word at her middle school, and there had been no disciplinary action taken against her attacker. I walked into the school mad as hell but was also acutely aware that anger isnt an emotion I have the privilege to display, even when its very much warranted.

I envy the white mothers Ive seen at my childrens private school hurling F-bombs and berating school officials, knowing that if I exhibited the same behavior it would be viewed as threatening and would most likely lead to a call for security. In my work as a strategist and public speaker on issues I care deeply about (maternal and child health), too often my passion is mistaken for anger.  

Black women are constantly battling the image others hold of us and fighting to be seen as who we really are. Yes, we too are angry. But we are also exhausted. Its physically painful and can be detrimental to our health to be constrained by such stereotypes .

Brittney Coopers book Eloquent Rage: A Black Feminist Discovers Her Superpower , released earlier this year, is a key standout for offering the kind of in-depth exploration , not cursory mention, that the perniciousness of this stereotype deserves. But Coopers analysis did not and is not receiving the same media attention and airtime as other recent offerings (which are by a white woman and a nonblack woman of color).

Black women should be at the core of any analysis of womens rage, not an afterthought or side chapter. Delving deeply into the experience of those most oppressed by an issue is the basis of any meaningful cultural analysis. When we lift up those most burdened, we all rise. Alas.  

So yes, as a black woman, I am proud to see the collective rage of women being touted as a pivotal turning point in our history. But we cannot forget that the privilege of rage is not given to all of us. We cant celebrate anger without specifically and deliberately acknowledging the ways its been used to control and suppress black women. That includes having uncomfortable conversations about white female fragility (and the tears that often follow). In the end, the revolution will only happen when all of us get to be furious.

Kimberly Seals Allers is an award-winning journalist, author and advocate for maternal and infant health. A former senior editor at ESSENCE and writer at FORTUNE, she writes frequently on the social and racial complexities of motherhood. Her latest book is The Big Letdown . Follow her on Twitter/Instagram at @iamKSealsAllers.

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