This was prompted by [livejournal.com profile] rmjwell and [livejournal.com profile] cakmpls discussing whether it is the job of people in oppressed groups to educate people outside those groups:

One of the things people mean by "it's not my job to educate you about X" is "I've done this already, I've answered these questions a hundred times, I refuse to spend my life doing so because so many people won't pick up a book on the subject, or watch a video."

That's doubly so either when it's a relatively small minority experience--there are a lot more heterosexuals who need to educate themselves about what it's like to be queer than there are articulate, out lesbians, bisexuals, and gay men to do the educating.

It's doubly so when the thing that people need to understand is in itself a major burden--someone mentioned having a child with Asperger's, for example.

It's doubly so when part of the burden is being looked at as an outsider, and the questions are phrased as "tell me about your people" rather than as "you're one of us, I'd like to understand this aspect of your life better."

From: (Anonymous)


I guess it depends on the question. I can certainly talk about what it's like to be a member of *a* minority group - not only as a Jew but as a woman in engineering, for example. But you're right that minority experiences also differ in important ways. I think I may have a little more insight into what it's like being black, for example, than, say, a male WASP, but "a little insight" is a far cry from actually knowing what it's like. And, caveat again, there are certainly some male WASPs who do know more about it than I ever will, for instance someone with a black sibling, cousin, or very close friend.

Being a woman isn't something you see as part of your identity? That's really rare, in a society that still often assigns toys, clothes, and even assumed personality facets by gender. I can't even guss if that would make living in this society simpler or more complicated.
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