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• Stereotypes are not complex drawings of people. In fact,
they are usually binary (either/or)
• They are standardized: they exist in the minds of a large
number of people. There cannot be a stereotype held by one
person; it must be shared by many to be a stereotype.
• The stereotype has a “special meaning”: it usually carries with
it enormous judgmental and emotional weight.
Stereotypes and Essentialism
Essentialism different from stereotypes because essentialism
assumes there is something genetically coded or “hard-wired”
that allows a certain race or gender to be able to know or
perform certain thing, both good and bad.
• The Négritude poets in Africa assumed that their “race”
gave them certain insights into nature and spirituality
• Some have argued that there are certain essential
qualities to genders that allow, for example, women to be
better nurturers.
• Essentialism has proved dangerous to American Indian
soldiers in wartime, who were (are?) sometimes assumed
to have special fighting skills or knowledge of the jungles
because of their “race.”
Stereotypes may involve essentialist ideas, but they can
also apply to class, geographic region, shared interests
(music), body shapes, and so on.
• Stereotypes usually employ some form of “knowledge,”
even scientific “knowledge,” about another group of
people.
• Whether or not they are truth, stereotypes create
enormous anger, laughter and fear with those who adhere
to them.
• Most of the time this knowledge is of course acquired
by word-of-mouth, but sometimes scientific studies show
that one ethnic group or another has more hate crimes,
alcoholism, teen pregnancies, and so on.
• But whatever general statistical knowledge may exist
about a person’s background, it seems ethical not deal
with people as individuals, not as a part of his or her
ethnic group’s statistics.
Walter C. Fleming. Myths and Stereotypes About Native Americans. Phi
Delta Kappan. November 2006.
Professor Fleming points out that Native populations are
the smallest and are the least understood.
In the absence of knowledge, the vacuum is filled
with “knowledge” from poor sources
• Movie westerns
• Television shows, including cartoons
• Bad literature
Binary oppositions appear to offer knowledge and understanding of complex issues,
but as Said points out, the knowledge that results from a series of oppositions when
applied to cultures is incomplete and ultimately inaccurate. Yet these oppositions
were used to describe, create, and constantly re-create the vision that Europeans
had of for people from Southeast Asia.
Said’s general concept also applies to the way Americans have described, created,
and re-created the idea of “The Indian” (almost always singular, not a community of
complex people). Consider the opposition of white/Indian. It’s important to
understand that in the United States the term “the white man” or “white culture” is
inaccurate when referring to Americans generally. Certainly after the Civil War, but
also prior to the Civil War, African Americans, Latinos, Southeast Asians, and man
other peoples from various backgrounds were profound and important parts of
American life. To call American “white culture” dismisses the contributions and the
complicity of peoples from other backgrounds, and using the term “the white man”
dismisses the important contributions of women.
The phrase the Indian “caught between two worlds” suggest a binary relationship
between cultures when Americans and indigenous peoples when these relationships,
depending on the tribe and the era, were characterized by trade, cultural exchange
going both ways, and constant change. The phrase also ignores or downplays how
Indian peoples negotiated with considerable skill and ingenuity their relations to
Americans and to new technologies. As a kind of “Orientalist” idea, it suggests that
Indians are passive and unimaginative, unlike Americans who would not find
themselves caught between two worlds because of their assertiveness and ingenuity.
The term “assimilation” is certainly a binary state: one either is or is not. Often, when
students observe that native peoples employ ideas and technologies that are used by
Americans, they consider these native peoples to be assimilated. But at the same time
when Americans use native technologies and beliefs (more often than most people
know), they are not considered assimilated into Indian life. It is in fact very difficult for
an immigrant of color to assimilate into another culture because that culture must
accept this immigrant almost without prejudice. Otherwise, the immigrant remains
and outsider, unassimilated. To become assimilated, people of color sometimes tried
passing, or appearing to be physically white to live in a community without prejudice.
Rather than assimilation, when indigenous people use ideas and technologies from
American culture, they often do so to strengthen their own communities and actually
to resist colonization. We call this appropriating the culture of the colonizer.
Another frequent application of binary oppositions to indigenous life is the idea of
the zero-sum game. According to this idea, if an indigenous person employs a nonnative technology or belief, then that results in an equal loss of indigenous culture.
For example, if an indigenous person becomes educated, then they automatically lose
something of their own culture, rather than enhancing their lives, as any other person
might, such as a UWM student going abroad. People adhering to the view of the
zero-sum game often see any kind of culture change within indigenous societies as
somehow tragic because of what they have “lost.” Of course, like any culture or
religion, indigenous societies change and adapt their most cherished beliefs and ideas
so that they remain useful and relevant in all times.
Other Popular Stereotypes (from Fleming)
Indians are getting free money from the government and/or getting rich from
casinos
The rhetoric of the gift
The discourse of broken treaties
Reserve rights
Indians receive free education
Trust status – policy, not law
A tribal decision
63 percent of non-Indians get some kind of financial aid (free
money)
Indians receive free health care
Part of the trust relationship
Funding is at 60 percent
For more on dealing with Indian children in the classroom, see John Watts, “Native American
Students,” Teaching Learning Committee, Montana State University, Bozeman, 2003,
www.montana.edu/teachlearn/ Papers (click on “culteralsens.html”).