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Please rewrite according to the existing paragraphs:…

Please rewrite according to the existing paragraphs:

contactCOVID-19Purpose: Derald W. Sue, Jennifer Bucceri, Annie I. Lin, Kevin L. Nadal, and Gina C. Torino’s “Racial Microaggressions and the Asian American Experience” as well as Trina Grillo’s journal, “Anti-Essentialism and Intersectionality: Tools to Dismantle the Master’s House,” will be the topics of my discussion. This week’s readings aim to raise awareness of the ways in which people—especially Asian Americans—face anti-essentialism and racial microaggressions.

Microaggression: Sue et al state that “microaggressions are short, ordinary interactions that convey derogatory messages to individuals of color due to their membership in a racial minority group. These encounters are so common and natural in day-to-day contacts that they are frequently written off as harmless.

Anti-essentialism: Essentialism is the belief that there is a singular experience that a woman, a Black person, or any other group can characterize separately from other facets of themselves; that is, that there is an “essence” to that experience (Grillo 19).

Microaggression: This is important since bullying and racism are the fundamental components of microaggressions. In our culture, those who identify as Black or Asian are the focus of microaggressions.

Over the period of Covid, I have witnessed and heard of individuals avoiding Asian Americans in public settings such as eating establishments, banks, and grocery stores because they were afraid of getting COVID-19 from them. Although it’s not as disruptive as physical attacks on Asian Americans, it’s nonetheless seen as subtle racism or microaggression. This idea highlights the social reality that, despite the absence of a physical barrier between the white majority from people of color, bigotry nonetheless manifests itself in our culture in subtle ways. The thing that most struck me while reading Sue et al.’s article was how commonplace microaggressions have become to the point that people just brush them off. More individuals are becoming aware of the detrimental effects that microaggressions may have on people’s identities via education about them among themselves and others. Understanding the idea of microaggressions can help us comprehend subtle racism and, ideally, open the door to limiting and ultimately eliminating racism.

 

Anti-essentialism: Essentialism, as I’ve discovered, is the idea that individuals are defined by a small number of distinct features and attributes. Thus, anti-essentialism made sense to me as the antithesis, holding that individuals are individuals regardless of their features and attributes. Stereotypes, or perhaps the other way around, are what gave rise to anti-essentialism.

In a manner like microaggression, I think that society as a whole can improve itself as long as more people gain awareness and keep teaching others. In addition, I think this idea historically shows that our culture has not changed or evolved because essentialism is an older ideology. Essentialism is a widely held idea that has persisted for so long that it has been passed down through the generations. This approach can aid in our understanding of things like customs and ingrained beliefs, as well as the impact they have on certain individuals.