Language Arts: When White Coworkers Try To "Act Black"
Within my professional life, I've had the experience of working solely under female supervisors. Although, I am fortunate to say that overall my professional relationship with all these women have been great, I have recently realized that the way my white supervisors have interacted with me has differed from how my black ones have acted towards me (FYI: I have only had white and black supervisors). There have been times when sharing laughs with my white supervisors, that they have slipped into "acting black." They'd start rolling their necks and eyes, dropping the "-ing" endings on their words, and finishing every statement with a drawn out "giiirrrlll!" I've always been fascinated with the underlying meanings of such deportment.
I found it very offensive to have been on the receiving end of such conduct from my white supervisors. Not only does it play on well known stereotypes of black women in the mainstream, it reeks of condescension. From day to day interaction, it was quite evident that my supervisors did not normally not speak nor act like "homegirl" caricatures. As previously stated, in the societal hierarchy formal speech is associated with whiteness and superiority. To have my bosses take on such traits meant that they "lowered" themselves to what they believed my station and mental capacity was to make a point. In doing so, they underestimated my intelligence level and made incorrect assumptions about my personality.
I know that I am one of the hundreds and maybe thousands of black women and men who have witnessed these actions. Overall, it is a sad reminder as to what too many in the mainstream believe blackness is, and how far we still have to go with breaking down stereotypes and presenting different images of what it means to be Black in today's world.
Valerie Jean-Charles is a 22 year old community servant and writer from Brooklyn, NY. Follow at @Empressval to join her never-ending conversations about everything and then some.
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