"Karenism" and the Problem of White Women: Reflections on Quotidian Forms of White Vigilantism in the Classroom
In: The Journal of men's studies, Band 30, Heft 3, S. 363-382
ISSN: 1060-8265, 1933-0251
Following emerging sociological critiques of hegemonic femininities and calls for embodied research that troubles long standing assumptions about academia as a "safe haven," this essay provides critical reflections on quotidian forms of gendered racism and vigilantism in the classroom. Specifically, I draw on undergraduate student engagement with "Cat Person," a short story about a "bad date" that was published in the New Yorker in 2017 and is now considered essential reading for the #MeToo era. By bringing pop culture artifacts and autoethnographic reflections into conversation with what philosopher Barbara Applebaum refers to as the "pedagogical practice of comforting discomfort," I examine forms of Karenism that emerge in higher education classrooms, particularly for women of color faculty. I argue that in an institutional context where class-privileged white women most readily access narratives about violability and fragility, they are better positioned to summon pedagogical forms of comforting and care.