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Male Privilege Analysis

Decent Essays

2. Privilege can mean different things depending on whom you ask. So, with its various associations, should we be using the word privilege in feminist discussions of WGS? After careful consideration, I would argue that, yes, it should. In fact, rather than a new word, we need further education about the feminist definition of privilege.
In her piece White Privilege and Male Privilege Peggy, McIntosh defines white privilege as “an invisible package of unearned assets that I can count on cashing in each day, but about which I was ‘meant’ to remain oblivious…like an invisible weightless knapsack of special provisions”. In using the term privilege as WGS scholars define it, one then begins to realize and look for the invisible instances of exercised privilege in one’s own life. McIntosh does this in her article, metaphorically unpacking the “[invisible knapsack]” …show more content…

This is essential because it is through unpacking these individual acts and experiences that we can begin to realize the larger institutionalized systems of power that are at play, a major advantage of the word privilege and its meaning. For instance, McIntosh observes, “I can, if I wish, arrange to be in the company of people of my race most of the time.” This specific realization then implies that there are people who cannot make such arrangements, who do not have this specific “unearned asset”. In turn, we can begin to see the inherent relationship between privilege and oppression, another advantage of the term privilege and its meaning. Indeed, Launius and Hassel define privilege as “benefits, advantages, and power that accrue to members of a dominant group as a result of the oppression of the marginalized group.” If WGS scholars were to define privilege without acknowledging oppression, they would be

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