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Mediocre book ijeoma oluo
Mediocre book ijeoma oluo





mediocre book ijeoma oluo

IJEOMA: The problem is, there’s so much programming your whole life that you’re supposed to be centered.

mediocre book ijeoma oluo

You can’t tie that to actual returns because those aren’t coming.ĪVERY: So to reshape structural inequalities that are hurting everyone, white men need to be in the fight. Just hang in there, keep doing your part, helping to exploit other people, keep exploiting yourself. IJEOMA: If we’re telling white men you deserve all of these things just because you’re white and that’s what ties them to an exploitative capitalist system is the idea that it’s just coming. Because, you know, if you are a white guy who then can’t get the job you want or the partner you want or these things you thought would happen, even though you were told you are doing enough and you played by the rules. What they don’t want is the average white man to be like, ‘Wait a minute, so you’re telling me this isn’t a fair system?’ĪVERY: This is all just a massive setup up for disappointment.

mediocre book ijeoma oluo

They’re afraid of white men understanding how their own exploitation works, how they’ve sold themselves out, how they’ve really been screwed over by this system as well. IJEOMA: The powers that be in these systems are not afraid of people of color understanding how exploitation works. But Ijeoma’s work looks at something that is also true - that men, maybe who aren’t wealthy or are single fathers - are exploited under these systems too! and what it has cost all of us, regardless of race or gender or ethnicity.ĪVERY: There’s this assumption that men are always the beneficiaries of current power structures, from politics to business. It’s important to recognize the reality, the harsh reality that it is. I know this sounds like building this evil image of white men, but I’m talking about whiteness as a structure, white maleness as a structure. But we are looking at 150 to 200 years of history around the creation of violent white male identity in America. And it is somewhat self-explanatory in the title. IJEOMA: My book is Mediocre: A Dangerous Legacy of White Male America. Here, Oluo introduces her new title and talks about the creation of violent white male identity in America: Oluo is a speaker, journalist, and author of the best seller So You Want to Talk About Race. Why do white men get so many chances to succeed, while marginalized groups get so few? Is cancel culture really a thing? On this episode of the Cut podcast, host Avery Trufelman speaks with author Ijeoma Oluo about her new book Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America.







Mediocre book ijeoma oluo