Analysis Of White Privilege The Invisible Knapsack

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America is a presumptuous country; its citizens don’t feel like learning any other language so they make everyone else learn English. White Americans are the average human being and act as the standard of living, acting, and nearly all aspects of life. In her essay “White Privilege: The Invisible Knapsack,” Peggy McIntosh talks about how being white has never been discussed as a race/culture before because that identity has been pushed on everyone else, and being white subsequently carries its own set of advantages. Gloria Anzaldua is a Chicana, a person of mixed identities. In an excerpt titled “How to Tame a Wild Tongue,” she discusses how the languages she speaks identifies who she is in certain situations and how, throughout her life, she has been pushed to speak and act more “American” like. McIntosh’s idea of whiteness as a subconscious race that carries its own advantages can enlighten why Anzaldua feels like she Anzaldua and her fellow Chicanos’ experience of being “required to take two speech classes...to get rid of [their] accents” supports McIntosh’s idea. When students go to school and they have some trait that isn’t “American,” they are often required to put in extra effort to either change or get rid of that trait, whether it be an accent or belief. Their special traits aren’t celebrated or accepted; they are shunned and frowned upon. Students who choose to go to school in the US should be able to feel accepted with all their characteristics, not isolated and singled out. Anzaldua experiences first hand how American establishments strive to create students who fit the ideal white life even though that life is specific to the

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