Yesterday was Juneteenth. I hope that everyone had a safe and reflective holiday. I think holidays are, in general, moments that compel reflection, and this holiday really calls for that as we consider African-American history, including the contributions Black folks have made to the U.S. and the world as well as the obstacles Black folks have faced and continue to face.
Holidays carry a lot of symbolic weight, and as someone who
studies culture and rhetoric, I’m continually going to assert that that
symbolic weight matters. At the same, I recognize that it’s important that
celebrating symbolic significance not drown out efforts to produce practical
social, political, and economic change. Additionally, it’s important that we
not act as if one form of symbolic significance absolves us from having to
address other forms of it.
With that in mind, I’m struck by the juxtaposition I have
been experiencing this week as I have seen commemorations of Juneteenth while also
feeling bombarded by media stories about “wokeness” in what are egregious
misappropriations of the term. Being “woke” is a practice that originates in
Black folks becoming aware of the depths of racism and inequity. Historically,
it’s not the kinds of associations with anything deemed politically liberal or
progressive that now permeate popular discourse. It’s not just about whom
Hollywood casts in what parts or what kinds of comments will solicit critique
or whatever people mean when they refer to that nebulous thing they label
“cancel culture.” Certainly, the politics of representation and discussion of
the merits of particular comment people make matter, but contemporary
uses of the term “woke” pay a disservice to the word’s important origins.
Current popular iterations of the word, which I have seen deployed by folks who
define themselves on the political left as well as the political right, erase
the deep interest in racial awareness from which the term emanated. In this
process, this misappropriation limits discourse in ways that prevent reflection
on the systematic and structural conditions that perpetuate racism and
inequity. As such, our society would do well to look back on the term’s origins
and refrain from using it in ways that diverge so widely from what it was
intended to mean.
With that in mind, I hope that as part of the reflectiveness of Juneteenth as we move forward in our calendar, we all might reflect on how we and other folks use the term
“woke” and we might take two specific actions: (1) ceasing to use the word in
ways that erase its history of calling attention to racism and inequity and (2)
calling out other folks and institutions when they use the word in ways that
create such erasure.