Identity In Shraya's Even This Page Is White

1321 Words3 Pages

All people have an identity that shows who they are; gender and race are two typical factors of the term “identity”. Some issues around gender and race commonly are transgenderism and racism. In Shraya’s collection of poems, Even This Page Is White, she offers both pessimism and hope when talking about racism and acceptance of transgenders.
In Even This Page Is White, gender is an aspect of identity and portrayed through a transwoman’s experience. According to Stryker, sex is considered biological; in contrast, gender is generally considered to be cultural, sexual, and biological (22). It is important to know which gender people aim to because gender “refers to social expectations of proper behavior and activities for a member of a particular gender” (Stryker 23). People who acknowledge this fact and have encouragement to be themselves should be respected, but, in somewhere, sometimes, that is hard to be accepted by society. Being themselves is a journey for transgender people, they have to ignore the injustices and discrimination, some people who lack of knowledge and understanding make them feel like they are breaking the norm of social construction. In other words, closed minded people think humans should …show more content…

This privilege may lead to the inequality of society in general, and the inequality of economy in particular. In the perspective of Marxism, the capitalist exploits the wage of laborers, who are forced to work under the control of the capitalist and capitalism is an exploitative system (p. 360, Brown). Similarly, if readers see the white privilege in the perspective of Marxism, the white privilege resulting from the racism keep people of color in low-paying job, supplying the white ruling the underclass of society. The readers may find out this inequality of economy in the poem, you are so

Open Document