February 23, 2015

Intersectionality

Intersectionality
The Thousand Oaks Mall is located in one of the wealthiest areas in the United States and is the family friendly alternative to the high end fashion stores of Beverly Hills, Hollywood, and Malibu existing just a few miles south. The mall campus clearly displays wealth in the elaborate decorations, higher end flooring and other building materials, and outdoor seating areas centered around an elaborate firepit. A few of the stores are out of my price range, but I have been here many times, scouring clearance racks at my favorite stores and indulging in free samples from See’s Candy. On this particular evening, I was here for a social event: happy hour at the Lazy Dog restaurant with some coworkers in honor of my new intern. Although fully abled, my coworkers and I worked at a disability advocacy organization.  Our new intern was born with cerebral palsy – this disability does not affect intellectual functioning but primarily contorts and contracts muscular development. In our intern’s case, her lower body was primarily affected, and she had weak upper body strength, which meant that she used a wheelchair.
It was a Friday night, and the mall parking lot was packed. I was giving the intern a ride and had picked this location not only for its accessibility but also for the lower happy hour prices. Since, I did not have a blue placard for parking in an accessible place, I was forced to park perpendicularly to the only free parking space I could find in order to create a safe space for the intern to transfer from the front seat of my car into her wheelchair. After unfolding the wheelchair and positioning it next to the front passenger seat, I locked one of the breaks and held firmly while the intern transferred. Unfortunately, my neglect of locking the other break coupled with a clumsy transfer created a sudden shift in the wheelchair; the intern landed suddenly and swiftly on the ground in the parking lot, unable to rise to her feet. Although I tried to lift her, she easily outweighed me by fifty pounds and remained stuck on the ground.
Over the next fifteen minutes, the two of us helplessly peered around the parking lot, waiting for someone to stop and help. At least a dozen cars drove by, many slowing down because they wanted the parking spot I was blocking. No one stopped. I had picked this location specifically because it was wheelchair accessible and wealthy enough to be (in my mind) safe for someone with a disability. The minutes eked by slowly and painfully as more and more people stared from their cars without stopping to help. In the past, when I was in trouble or inconvenienced, people usually helped even when I did not want or need their assistance. Now when someone was literally grounded, people just drove by. My companion was white, female, and lower class, but her main distinctions from me were the presence of a wheelchair and an oddly shaped body. These crucial differences seemed to be the reason people persisted in ignoring us. Finally, a woman and her husband came hurrying up. She was a compassionate nurse, and it took all three of us to lift my companion back into her chair. I felt offended and abandoned, but the intern shared that these sorts of experiences had happened to her many times.
These long minutes in the mall parking lot underscored the validity of intersectionality for me. Were one to look at our demographic information, the intern and myself would be remarkably similar. Yet, her societal experience was completely changed by her disability; by associating with her, I too experienced a complete different reaction to distress. Every human being’s identity is comprised of multiple groups, the main ones centering on race, gender, sex, religion, ability, age, and so forth. In “The Complexity of Identity”, Beverly Tatum postulates that each of these groups is either dominate or subordinate within society at large (2013). Yet, our experience in life is never centered on merely one group. Intersectionality maintains that all of these groupings interact together to influence our human experiences and positions in society. We can be simultaneously dominant and subordinate, such as an Arabic male. It is this “overlapping” of “various forms of discrimination” that is the hallmark of intersectionality, in contrast to many social justice movements which isolate the experiences of one particular group and present group experiences as being parallel rather than simultaneous (African American Policy Forum, n.d.).
Intersectionality is a valuable tool for many reasons, not the least of which is to remind us that dominant groups and people in power often secure their power by fomenting contention over subordinate group distinctions—in other words, denying or ignoring the intersectionality of subordinate groups. One example of this is race relations within the United States. In The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in an Era of Colorblindness, Michelle Alexander contends that throughout the history of the United States, powerful white men used race to secure their power, pitting poor white men (“Crackers”) against African-Americans so that they would not ally to overthrow the upper economic class. After slavery was legally outlawed, these powerful men enacted convict laws that essentially re-enslaved freedmen in appalling working conditions. The ruling class assuaged the anger and frustration of poor white men further impoverished by the Civil War by lifting them just slightly above African Americans—the absolute bottom class (2010). Social commentator Audre Lorde offers a similar critique of the 1960’s: “…white America—racist and liberal alike—was more than pleased to sit back as spectator while Black militant fought Black Muslim, Black Nationalist badmouthed the nonviolent, and Black women were told that our only useful position in the Black Power movement was prone” (2007).
Intersectionality also warns us of the dangers of race neutral policy. The concept of “colorblindness” or the irrelevancy of a person's skin color to their treatment and experience as a human is perhaps most famously touted by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in his well-known “I Have a Dream” speech. This speech is taught to most children in public education schools today, which is one indication that overt racism is no longer tolerated in our society. Yet, Alexander repeatedly emphasizes Dr. King’s warning: “…racial caste systems do not require racial hostility or overt bigotry to thrive. They need only racial indifference” (p 14).  Race neutral policy (or “colorblindness”) can easily turn into a default excuse for apathy. People’s hearts are more difficult to change than systems, but lasting change will be accomplished when men treat each other as having inherent value because of their humanity instead of race, gender, or even accomplishments. This is the stance taken by Patricia Williams, who wrote a piece included in Readings for Diversity and Social Justice entitled "The Emperor's New Clothes" in which she posits: "While I do want to underscore that I embrace color-blindness as a legitimate hope for the future, I worry that we tend to enshrine the notion with a kind of utopianism whose naiveté will ensure its elusiveness" (p. 116). In other words, claiming that one does "not see color" and "treats everyone the same" denies the inherent privileges and oppression experienced by different races. 
With its emphasis on structural privilege and oppression, intersectionality is a crucial theory for social justice work. Yet that very emphasis may limit it as a social theory. Human beings certainly institute and experience distinction without experiencing structural dichotomies. Children in particular are excellent at exposing the “otherness” of individuals who do not conform to group norms, even for something as simple as not being aware of a popular television show. Intergroup theory was presented in my undergraduate instruction in Communications as a social theory examining individual behavior within groups (Tajfel & Turner, 1986).  Although it does also focus on stereotypes and prejudices, the broad premise of intergroup theory is that we are all members of hundreds and hundreds of “groups”—a group being simply two or more people who share something in common. During a communication interaction, one group identity generally prevails. Thus, when one attends a church service, the prevailing group would be religious affiliation. When one attends the family function following the church service, the prevailing group is the specific family or perhaps “mom” or “son.”
The largest group is human beings. Then major groups are broken down in order of common identification such as gender, age, ethnicity, religion, profession, politics, etc. Yet, in contrast to intersectionality, groups can be as specific as people who play World of Warcraft or people who like Thai food. When we interact with people, we are usually unconsciously interacting within the context of a handful of group identities. 
Intergroup theory is a helpful complement to intersectionality because it helps us to remember that people are capable of creating connection and distinction based on almost any characteristic, not just the groups which have evolved into structures of privilege and oppression.  Intersectionality benefits from this reminder of the overlapping complexity of human experience.



References
African American Policy Forum. (n.d.). A primer on intersectionality. Columbia Law School.
Alexander, M. (2010). The new Jim Crow: Mass incarceration in an era of colorblindness. The New Press.
Lourde, A. (2007). Sister outsider: Essays & speeches by Audre Lorde. Berkeley. Crossing Press.
Tajfel, H., & Turner, J. C. (1986). The social identity theory of intergroup behaviour. In S. Worchel & W. G. Austin (Eds.), Psychology of Intergroup Relations (pp. 7–24). Chicago, IL: Nelson-Hall.
Tatum, B. D. (2013). The complexity of identity: “Who am I?” In M. Adams, W. Blumenfield, C. R. Castaneda, H.W. Hackman, M. L. Peters, & X. Zuniga (Eds.), Readings for Diversity and Social Justice 3rd (p. 5-7). New York: Routledge.

Williams, P. J. (2013). The emperor’s new clothes. In M. Adams, W. Blumenfield, C. R. Castaneda, H.W. Hackman, M. L. Peters, & X. Zuniga (Eds.), Readings for Diversity and Social Justice 3rd (p. 116-121). New York: Routledge.

February 16, 2015

A Feminist Critique of Grand Theft Auto V

 A Feminist Critique of Grand Theft Auto V
Grand Theft Auto V, produced by Rockstar Games, is the most recent iteration of the most popular video game series in the world, earning $1 billon within a mere three days of its release in 2013. It has been universally lauded by game critics according to the criteria of their industry (Metacritic, 2013). Yet, even a cursory examination of the game from a feminist perspective reveals deeply troubling content promoting sexism, misogyny, and patriarchy.
Promoting and Upholding Negative Dominant Narratives
Much debate currently exists as to the definition of “feminism.” The author of this paper agrees with the perspective of activist bell hooks who contends: “Feminism is a struggle to end sexist oppression. Its aim is not to benefit solely any specific group of women, any particular race or class of women. It does not privilege women over men” (2013, p. 339). Sexist oppression permeates all layers and levels of Grand Theft Auto V; a complete listing of all examples would exceed the target length of this paper. In summary, the game promotes sexist oppression through the choices it gives to its players, narrow and overly sexualized depictions of female characters, and content such as advertising and talk shows that present women primarily as sexual objects.
The first evidence of oppression is the lack of “playable” female characters. Players can choose one of three male characters as the main protagonist. One of those three is a former pimp (Feminstborgia, 2014). The second level of oppression is the depiction of the few female characters as highly sexualized beings with little to no agency. As one female reviewer for a prominent gamer website summarized:
it’s deeply frustrating that, while its central and supporting male characters are flawed and complex characters, with a few extremely minor exceptions …, GTA V has little room for women except to portray them as strippers, prostitutes, long-suffering wives, humorless girlfriends and goofy, new-age feminists we’re meant to laugh at (Petit, 2013).
It is worthwhile to note that although the reviewer gave the game an overall 9 points out of a total 10, male fans responded with rage to her protest of the game’s misogyny. Over 20,000 primarily negative comments were left response to her otherwise commonplace review, and a petition was started on www.change.org for her to be fired as a reviewer (Parfitt, 2013).
The third level of sexist oppression is the game’s representation of females in the sex industry. The game depicts women as (often gladly) choosing to engage in live “sexcam” websites, pornography, stripping, and prostitution (Feministborgia, 2013). Within several available strip club scenes, male players are encouraged to break the “no touching” rule and fondle the women’s private areas. If the player manages to accomplish this without being caught by the club security, the game designers ensure that the strippers will respond positively and might even offer to meet the player later for free sex (Feministborgia, 2013). Often throughout the course of their missions, players are offered the opportunity to solicit prostitutes, chose a sex act from a menu, watch the virtual sex, and then choose whether or not to murder the women to regain their money. Murder options include beating, running over victims a car, throwing a grenade, shooting, using a hatchet, etc. Players’ points go up for having sex with a prostitute, although not for murdering her (Cook, 2014). The game also contains countless crude, demeaning, and violent references to women from billboard advertisements to “entertainment,” including a (male) talk show host recommending a husband “drown” his non-submissive wife and a discussion on how women “enjoy” having their sternums crushed during sex (Feministborgia, 2013).
Patriarchy Silences Women
Some reviewers have dismissed feminist critiques of Grand Theft Auto V by noting that the game depicts violence to male and female characters alike. In the words of one British reviewer: “The game’s treatment of women – every female in the game exists solely to be sneered, leered or laughed at – is a real concern until you realise that it applies to the male characters as well” (Edge, 2013). What this and similar reviewers fail to realize is that sexist oppression is not only exerted through presence but also through absence. The lack of positive images can be just as damaging as the presence of negative ones. There is a conspicuous absence of women portrayed in healthy and varied roles: friend, boss, professional, intellectual, artist, etc. Women are not shown as being able to interact with men in nonsexual ways with the exception of a few weak family members who cause familial strife. The women in Grand Theft Auto are not shown to be strong, savvy, capable, or conscientious. Why then is this game so popular? Simple: Grand Theft Auto is a product and a perpetrator of patriarchy, a prevailing cultural system of male dominance. Patriarchal systems allow sexist oppression to flourish with impunity. Patriarchy has many components and manifestations, but author Allen Johnson summarizes it well:
Above all, patriarchal culture is about the core value of control and domination in almost every area of human existence. … To have power over and to be prepared to use it are defined culturally as good and desirable (and characteristically “masculine”, and to lack such power or to be reluctant to use it is seen as weak if not contemptible (and characteristically “feminine”) (2013, p. 334).
Real Life Victims
There are countless examples of women who have been harmed by the sexist oppression. The consistent pay gap between women and men in the United States is just one such significant example. Yet, in light of Grand Theft Auto V’s extensive content regarding the sex industry, it seems prudent for this paper to focus on some of the ugly truths about women in the sex industry. The majority of women in the sex industry have experienced some form of sexual abuse in their past (Farley, 2012). Many feel that they have no other viable income options and maintain that they are trapped into the industry due to circumstances. Most are under the control of a pimp (Farley, 2012), the former occupation of the main character in Grand Theft Auto V. “Pimp” is a common term for what the law terms “trafficker” as in a perpetrator of human trafficking. The Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000 established that a person involved in the sex industry due to force, fraud, or coercion is a victim of commercial sexual exploitation or human trafficking, the fastest growing crime in the world today (United States Department of State, 2014). The International Labour Organization estimates that the majority of trafficking situations are labor trafficking, but also gives a best guess that sex trafficking generates a much greater profit than labor trafficking, garnering $99 out of $150 billion dollars gained from this illegal industry (2014). Moreover, victims are usually exploited in multiple forms within the sex industry. For example, a girl or woman who is forced into prostitution is often also filmed for the production of pornography.
Within the United States, most women entered the sex industry when they were minors. Sex traffickers (or “pimps”) usually prey on the most vulnerable: homeless runaways, “throwaways,” and very young children. The average age at which girls are first manipulated and forced into prostitution is a mere 12-14 years old (United States Department of Justice).  Although no one knows the true scale of sex trafficking in the United States, the Federal Bureau of Investigation has declared child sex trafficking a significant crime and maintains ongoing investigations through its Innocence Lost Task Force. In a 3-day operation in 2014, the FBI rescued 168 American children from sex trafficking and arrested 281 traffickers (Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2014). Once these young people turn eighteen, they suffer from the myth that prostitution is a “choice” and a “job” and receive jail time instead of victim services.
 During their exploitation, victims repeatedly undergo severe mental and physical trauma at the hands of their traffickers as well as their buyers, experiencing severe violence, humiliation, PTSD, sexually transmitted diseases, forced abortions, and other atrocities (Lloyd, 2011). A special report by the Child Welfare Council (CWC) found that “68 percent of victims of Commercial Exploitation of Children suffered from chronic health problems and post-traumatic stress disorder and likened the experience of victims to experiences of ‘hostages, prisoners of war, or concentration camp inmates.” The reality of sex trafficking victims is a sharp contrast to the women portrayed in Grand Theft Auto V. Sex trafficking survivor, major activist, and aftercare service provider Rachel Lloyd wisely ties sexual exploitation back into patriarchy:
Commercial sexual exploitation and trafficking are part of the continuum of gender-based violence, not a separate issue. How we view the rights of women and girls, (again particularly those who we view as “less than” based on race and class or some predetermined idea of their “purity”, blamelessness etc.) is absolutely part of the problem when it comes to commercial sexual exploitation and trafficking (2015).
A More Just Version of Grand Theft Auto V
            What would it take to create a more just version of Grand Theft Auto V? Is it possible, or should gamers boycott the franchise altogether? Social commentator Jackson Katz maintains that violence against women is not a women’s issue but a men’s issue, claiming that men’s actions towards women reveal more about men than they do about women (2013). In this vein, New York Times journalist Chris Suellentrop noted the rampant sexism in Grand Theft Auto V and had the chance to lightly query the co-founder of Rockstar games, the franchise creator:
When I asked Mr. Houser if he had thought about the portrayal of women in Rockstar’s games, he said, “Seemingly not as much as I should have.” He added: “These three guys fit with the story we wanted to tell. It would be hard to take one of them and replace him — I mean, I suppose we could have done it, early enough on — with a female character” (2013).
Mr. Houser’s response not only ignores the sexist oppression existing in his games but also denies any social responsibility to fixing the problems. His comments are a confirmation of Katz’s conclusion:
In spite of significant social change in recent decades, men continue to grow up with, and are socialized into, a deeply misogynistic, male-dominated culture, where violence against women—from the subtle to the homicidal—is disturbingly common. It’s normal. And precisely because the mistreatment of women is such a pervasive characteristic of our patriarchal culture, most men, to a greater or lesser extent, have played a role in its perpetuation (2013, p. 342).
In Grand Theft Auto V, men are literally playing a role in the perpetuation of violence against women. A more just version of this game would first create smart, capable, and confident female characters embodying a variety of female experiences. Women would be presented in relational roles that are not primarily sexual or subordinate. Although the depiction of sexist oppression in the game does often echo the unfortunate realities of this world, a more just version would also include emotional, mental, and physical consequences for sexist actions such as legal action, retribution, and—most importantly—decreased capacity for human connectedness. Finally, the game currently presents choices of whether or not to negatively engage with women in the sex industry. It should include choices of positively engaging with women such as befriending them without sexual contact, asking their advice or opinions, or even ascertaining whether or not they are under the control of a trafficker. In these ways, Grand Theft Auto V could move our culture towards a more egalitarian interaction between genders instead of normalizing sexist oppression.


References
California Child Welfare Council. (2013). Prevalence of commercially sexually exploited children. Retrieved from http://www.chhs.ca.gov/CWCDOC/CSEC%20Fact%20Sheet%20-%201.pdf
Cook, J. (2014, November 18). The New 'Grand Theft Auto' Lets You Have Realistic Sex With Prostitutes. Retrieved February 4, 2015, from http://www.businessinsider.com/grand-theft-auto-features-first-person-sex-with-prostitutes-2014-11 
Edge Online. (2013, September 16). Grand Theft Auto Review (Web log post). Retrieved from http://www.edge-online.com/reviews/grand-theft-auto-v-review/
Farley, M. & Butler, E. (2012). Prostitution and trafficking – Quick facts. Online. Retrieved from http://www.prostitutionresearch.com/Prostitution%20Quick%20Facts%2012-21-12.pdf
Federal Bureau of Investigation. (2014). Operation cross country: rescuing victims of child sex trafficking. Retrieved from http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2014/june/operation-cross-country/operation-cross-country
Feministborgia. (2013, October 19). Grand Theft Auto V –A feminist’s review (Web log post). Retrieved from https://feministborgia.wordpress.com/2013/10/19/grand-theft-auto-v-a-feminists-review/
Hooks. B. (2013). Feminism: A movement to end sexist oppression. In M. Adams, W. Blumenfield, C. R. Castaneda, H.W. Hackman, M. L. Peters, & X. Zuniga (Eds.), Readings for Diversity and Social Justice 3rd (p. 337-339). New York: Routledge.
International Labour Office. (2014). Profits and poverty: the economics of forced labour. Geneva: Author.
Johnson, A.G. (2013). Patriarchy, the system: An it, not a he, a them, or an us. In M. Adams, W. Blumenfield, C. R. Castaneda, H.W. Hackman, M. L. Peters, & X. Zuniga (Eds.), Readings for Diversity and Social Justice 3rd (p. 332-337). New York: Routledge.
Katz, J. (2013). Violence against women is a men’s issue. In M. Adams, W. Blumenfield, C. R. Castaneda, H.W. Hackman, M. L. Peters, & X. Zuniga (Eds.), Readings for Diversity and Social Justice 3rd (p. 340-343). New York: Routledge.
Lloyd, R. (2011). Girls like us: Fighting for a world where girls are not for sale, an activist finds her calling and heals herself. New York: HarperCollins.
Look Different. (2015, January 30). This month is human trafficking awareness month. Retrieved February 4, 2015, from http://lookdifferentmtv.tumblr.com/post/109615431330/this-month-is-human-trafficking-awareness-month 
Metacritic. (2013). Grand Theft Auto V (Web review). Retrieved from http://www.metacritic.com/game/playstation-4/grand-theft-auto-v
Parfitt, B. (2013, September 16). Gamers petition for sacking of GameSpot writer who criticised GTAV for misogyny (Web log post). Retrieved from http://www.mcvuk.com/news/read/gamers-petition-for-sacking-of-gamespot-writer-who-criticised-gtav-for-misogyny/0121238
Petit, C. (2013, September 16). City of angels and demons (Web log post). Retrieved from http://www.gamespot.com/reviews/grand-theft-auto-v-review/1900-6414475/
Suellentrop, C. (2013, September 16). Grand Theft Auto V is a return to the comedy of violence. New York Times. Retrieved from www.nytimes.com
Walker, K, & California Child Welfare Council (2013). Ending the commercial sexual exploitation of children: A call for multi-system collaboration in California. Child Welfare Council. 100 p.
United States Department of State. (2014). Trafficking in persons report. Washington, DC: Author.