To really understand racism and
prejudice in
America, a young Pennsylvania researcher would travel south to where
she felt she could see it, hear it, and feel it. “For much of the
U.S. public the Deep South, and especially Mississippi, represents the
most racist region in the United States,” according to Von Bakanic,
associate professor of sociology. So for her studies about racial
attitudes, Mississippi would be Bakanic's "ground zero." She was
especially interested in the area near Neshoba, Miss. where the
infamous murder of three black men had taken place in 1964.
Bakanic says that even though racial
prejudices are present in all areas of the country, Mississippi is a
place where it is considerably more noticeable.
“The
way in which I could see the prejudices was different, I was an
outsider,” she said.
This is one reason why Bakanic
formed a team of researchers to help with data gathering in her study
of the difference in the way black and white people interpret questions
about race.
She based this study on the fact that
black and white people experience race relations from different social
positions.
Bakanic set up interviews for her team of researchers to ask community
members of both races three specific (closed-ended) questions about
segregation.
Based on their level of agreement or
disagreement to these questions Bakanic broke the respondents up into
four categories from strong support of segregation to no support.
Her results showed that 73 percent of respondents
had no
support for segregation, but based on recorded comments, this group
used more racist terms than those who supported segregation.
“Even if their comments had been pointed out as
racist
sentiments, they would probably not have recanted their opinions or
understood what others judged to be racist about the comments,” Bakanic
says.
The results of her study found that while there has been a considerable
shift in views on racial matters since the 1960s, whites and blacks
still hold divergent views about race relations.
Bakanic
also found that in response to remembering the violent history of the
area, whites found it threatening while black people in the community
found it reassuring that racial terrorism could not occur again.
Bakanic says that what she found most surprising about her research was
how people viewed being prejudice as a bad thing and would say they
were not prejudice, but their comments and stories showed to be
grounded in prejudice.
She says, “People don’t want
to be prejudice and so they go into a sort of denial of their
prejudices and they really come to believe that they are not prejudice.”
She is fascinated by the psychological way that
people can
deny being prejudice at the same time as espousing it.
Bakanic shares her work with her students and even has them work on it
with her.
In a recent Methods Sequence course her
students were able to conduct an online experiment to study prejudices
through rating their own prejudices and answering timed-response
questions about racial issues.
The results
surprised the students and drew their attention to their own
prejudices, which led to a greater number of biases to be reported by
the students.
She says that from her work she would like to see “that people would
understand the role of prejudice and that perhaps we could get people
to want to get rid of their prejudices or at least control them.”
Bakanic’s work has not been limited to racial prejudices, she has also
studied gender and class prejudices as well as homophobia and ageism.
She is currently writing a book on prejudices as well as writing a
paper about Hispanic stereotypes. She is also
involved in a study with MUSC’s Crime Victim’s Center concerning gender
attitudes toward one another in relation to sexual assault.
For more information about Dr. Von Bakanic, please visit her website
at: http://www.cofc.edu/~bakanicv/