Recommendations from our site
“Pragya Agarwal’s Wish We Knew What to Say which is essentially about raising children to be anti-racist. Her own perspective is very interesting on this because she’s a woman of color, but two of her own children are white passing. She’s very sensitive to the different possibilities and the different ways in which parents will approach this depending on their perspective and privilege. She’s very much speaking to both parents of color and white parents. I really liked this book. I found it very helpful, because it highlights the importance of being open with children about issues of race, and also the way in which a lot of liberal, well-intentioned parents might be mistaken in their approach. The mistake is to try to raise children to be colorblind, believing that if we just teach our children not to notice race, everything will be solved. Actually, that is itself often a reflection of privilege, for white parents, and ultimately not all that helpful, because children will notice race, whatever we do or say. That’s Argawal’s point. Children will notice racial difference, because they will see it conferring subtle advantages or disadvantages from a very early age. She talks about the way in which at a very early age, children will start to reflect the pervading social norms about this. There are studies that show that very young children move from not caring what color skin their playmates are, or gravitating towards children who share their own race, towards all children showing a preference for playing with white children, at as young as three, because they’ve been socialized to think of them as better.” Read more...
The best books on The Ethics of Parenting
Elizabeth Cripps, Philosopher
Our most recommended books
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Dibs in Search of Self
by Virginia M Axline -
Portraits of the Mind
by Carl Schoonover -
Silas Marner
by George Eliot -
The Whole Brain Child
by Dr Daniel Seigel & Dr Tina Payne Bryson -
Raising Feminist Boys: How to Talk with Your Child about Gender, Consent, and Empathy
by Bobbi Wegner -
Our Babies, Ourselves
by Meredith F Small