You would think that by now folks would know better than to use culture as a costume. Sadly….students and adults are still finding themselves in hot water over using blackface, culturally insensitive costumes, and themed events that further marginalize underrepresented demographics.
In recent years there have been several examples of students and faculty learning that cultures/stereotypes don’t make good costumes. Megyn Kelly, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and a host of politicians are some of the most recent high-profile folks to receive backlash over using culture for a costume. A while back, this teacher in Alabama came under scrutiny for his attempt at being Kanye, which would have gone over ok if he hadn’t bothered to do it in blackface. So because I know it’s time for organizations to have Halloween mixers and parties, please do it right! Don’t ruin your reputation, your organization’s rep, and demonstrate cultural ignorance. Here are three ways to make sure you get it right this Halloween.
Ask yourself this question: Does this represent me and the values of my org? We’ve all heard enough public apologies to know exactly what to expect when someone steps to the podium after a public scandal. The first line is always, “these actions don’t represent me/my character/my organization/etc.” You have time to think about your actions. If they don’t represent your values and will put you and your organization in a negative light, don’t do it! You signed up to be a leader on your campus, embrace the responsibility that comes along with that. Don’t volunteer to take that L .
Not using culture as a costume is not about being politically correct or having a sense of humor. If people are offended by the stereotypical images of their culture being used as a parody or joke, it’s not about hypersensitivity. It’s much bigger than that. How populations or cultures are viewed and treated has been a hot-button topic for at least 150 years. If you can’t see the issue, your perspective may be skewed by your privilege. A good way to think about it is this way, would you be comfortable wearing the costume in a room full of strangers (knowing all those strangers represent or support the group you’re misrepresenting)? Also, it just ain’t funny! It’s not funny to present a caricature of a culture or group of people. The current unrest in our country has highlighted the pain some folks are feeling around simply existing in America, don’t exacerbate it.
If you didn’t know, there is a national conversation going on about race, religion, ethnicity, and sexual orientation/gender identification. It’s important that we understand the current cultural climate of our campus, community, and country. I always encourage students to have dialogue about subjects that broaden their perspective and wearing culturally based Halloween costumes is the least effective way to start that dialogue. You have enough to worry about (gpa, events, deadlines, graduation, repaying student loans after graduation) to jeopardize your collegiate experience with a costume marginalizing a culture or population. Also, be aware of your blind spots. You could be cool with folks from other cultures and have a level of comfort that you all understand and agree upon. Everyone else may not understand or appreciate those relationships. Don’t just not use culture as a costume because it has the possibility to get you in trouble. Don’t do it because you understand it's inappropriate. Don’t do it because you care about the experiences of your peers even when they don’t directly impact you. This is an amazing time to be alive, be on the right side of history.
Be Smart. Be Honest. Be Aware. Have a great time!!!
At this point in the game, there is no excuse for using culture as a prop. You know what it means, you understand that it's wrong, and if you do it you deserve all the smoke that comes along with it!! Handle yourself accordingly.
p.s. Send all snickers and Reese’s cups to me cause they’re nasty and I don’t want you to suffer.
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