Who Gets to Be Angry

Recent events have reminded me that our culture has strict rules about who gets to be angry.

There are social psychology papers going back many years showing us that men get to be angry when women do not. Here’s a news story about just one:

STEREOTYPES DIE HARD

Citing earlier research, Uhlmann and Brescoll show that for reasons including deeply entrenched stereotypes, there is a real difference between men and women when it comes to expressing anger. Indeed, studies have established that men who express anger at work sometimes benefit from doing so, as co-workers subsequently perceive the mas more important, powerful, and independent. However, when women lose their cool, they do not benefit from such positive consequences

MARKED GENDER DIFFERENCES

“People … view a man’s anger as a response to objective, external circumstances, but a woman’s  anger as a product of her personality,” say Uhlmann and Brescoll. “As a result, a professional woman’s anger may imply that she is not competent at dealing with workplace situations.”

This is also a bind for women in politics, of course. Awhile back Hillary Clinton was accused by Republicans of being “too angry” to be President (to which David Letterman said, “Did you hear what the Republicans have said about Hillary Clinton? They say she’s too angry to be president. Hillary Clinton, Senator Hillary Clinton, too angry to be president. When she heard this, Hillary said, ‘Oh yeah? I’ll rip your throats out, you bastards.'”) This is right up there with the complaint that she’s “ambitious.” Ambition is fine and noble in a man, but highly suspect in a woman. But the point is, all other things being equal, it’s okay for men to be angry, but when a woman is angry something must be wrong with her. The stereotype that women are “more emotional” has no basis in observable fact, but persists even in people who ought to know better.

I said “all other things being equal,” and those “all other things” are race, of course. All kinds of social psychology papers have been written about how anger is perceived in whites and blacks. Whites see anger in blacks as “threatening,” more so than anger observed in other whites. I googled “black anger” and got a lot of commentaries complaining that blacks are angry and scary. They shouldn’t be so angry. They should try anger management.

The stereotype of the angry black is so entrenched in white America that the Right seizes on any demonstration of emotion in our President and First Lady as proof of it. Michelle Obama cannot demonstrate even the mildest of pique in public without right-wing media going ballistic over the “proof” that she’s militant and angry. Barack Obama can no doubt credit his political success to his extraordinary discipline in not showing anger in public, because just one outburst would have ended his career. Even so, Mitt Romney tried to paint the President as an “angry black man.” Hey, he’s black; he’s gotta be angry. Right? See especially Ta-Nehisi Coates, “Fear of a Black President.”

The Key and Peele “anger translator” skits are partly spoofs of the President and partly spoofs of the culture that forces him into no-anger-allowed box. Hilariously, the “skit” performed at the White House Correspondent’s Dinner drew out the bigots like honey draws ants; see, for example, John Hinderaker  and Byron York, two men so soaked in racism they can’t see the joke has been on them, all along.

Give me an example of a white man, especially a prominent white man, being penalized for being angry. I can’t think of one. Women aren’t allowed to be angry. African-Americans aren’t allowed to be angry. Nobody ever wags fingers at white men to tell them they’re too angry. And it’s not because they aren’t. See, for example, Fox News.

It hasn’t been that long since “angry white men” were being touted as a powerful voting block. Remember the angry teabaggers who kept showing up at townhall meetings to yell about the Affordable Care Act? (And yes, these included some women; I propose the maha anger-gender corollary, that it’s okay for a woman to be angry when she’s standing next to a man angry about the same thing.)

And then there are our frequent mass shootings, nearly always perpetrated by white men. When a white man acts out violently, his actions are attributed to “mental illness” or other factors unique to him as an individual. Anyone else doing the same thing would be proof that his entire demographic group, whatever that is, is unhinged. However, people looking closely at the several White Male Perpetrators say that one thing they have in common is a sense of “aggrieved entitlement” that really is linked to their race and gender and how those factors are perceived in our culture (which is not to say that all white men are “angry”).

As with men in the workplace, anger in a white man often is perceived a virtue or strength, not a threat. Remember Carl Paladino? He was the angry white guy who won the New York Republican gubernatorial primary in 2010. He didn’t come close to beating Andrew Cuomo, but no Republican is going to win a statewide general election in New York. The thing with Paladino is that his entire sales pitch was that he was angry. That’s what got his primary win — he was angry.

It’s OK if you’re a white male Republican.

But then, back during the Bushie years the Right was always complaining about the angry left. Here’s a couple of old blog posts about that — “Speaking of Anger” and “Our Left Wing.” Here’s a snip from the latter:

Predictable reaction from rightie blogs: We’re cool and intellectual, and those lefties are unhinged. I was checking out reactions on one rightie blog, where I found this comment:

“I don’t recall there being a vocal Right that was calling for the public lynching of President Clinton.”

Sorta takes your breath away, doesn’t it? I couldn’t read any further. Enough of that.

And now we come to Baltimore. All sorts of people are clucking about the violence, and I don’t condone violence, either. But as I wrote yesterday, something’s out of whack when citizens are told to control themselves while the government is allowed to be as violent as it wishes, with little to no accountability.

White “patriots” who want to secede or who are hankerin’ for an armed confrontation with the feds out at the Bundy Ranch = acceptable.  Tempers boiling over because of actual injustice = unacceptable.

Basically, the degree to which one is allowed to be angry, and at what, depends on how much power you have. The powerful can be as angry as they like, without criticism. But when those with less power are angry, they are condemned for it.

7 thoughts on “Who Gets to Be Angry

  1. If you’re a rich and powerful white man, or a wannabe rich and powerful poor white man, you can piss on anyone and everyone anytime you like.
    And you can piss them off, too – with no repercussions.

    But if you’re not, just grin and bear it, and just think of it as yellow rain.

    ‘Cause if you complain to loudly, or, FSM-forbid, lash-out, you won’t just get pissed-on, you’ll have more sh*t to deal with than you’ll ever know what to do about!
    And that’s if you can do anything about it. Which you probably can’t, or won’t be allowed to do.

    It’s the way it’s always been.
    Police forces, from the beginning of societies, were there to protect the interests of the rich, and keep the riff-raff in their place. And also that the riff-raff don’t kill too many of themselves off, or else there’ll be no one to do the King’s and the other upper crust’s work – and if there’s no work, make sure you keep those people so oppressed that they don’t have the means to upset the apple-carts, and replace them with tumbrels:
    Going back as far as Ancient Egypt, China, Greece, Rome, until today, that’s the job of the police.
    And it most probably will be for a long time, if not forever.

    It sucks to be the 98%.
    And with each percent point you go down, it sucks more and more.

  2. This – the right to get angry, and the right to determine what’s okay to get angry about – is one of the best illustrations of the concept of “privilege” that I can think of.

  3. Well said. I’m going to save this as “The Anger Theorem.”

    But this difference is so blatant it should be obvious to everyone. In my professional life I have had to deal with, at times, white men feeling free to scream at the top of their lungs, openly cursing, loudly, like sailors (sorry, sailors) and becoming absolutely unhinged, without repercussions. In fact, I can think of a few cases where men who acted out like that at work who were deemed to be “tough” leaders who “took no guff” from people.

    I, on the other hand, have had to walk on eggshells and be mindful of being a cuddly teddy bear, lest someone think I’m “angry.” Because when you are black, you don’t have to actually be angry to, “be angry.”

    • //But this difference is so blatant it should be obvious to everyone.//

      It isn’t, though, is it? It hasn’t been all that long since I’ve had the “you’re too emotional” thing thrown in my face by some college-age white guys. They learn early.

  4. Narcissism is a huge piece of it. The wingnuts at Bundy ranch actually feel infringed upon and angry with the government. They likewise regard blacks as leeches, entitled, and therefore whatever anger they feel isn’t justified.

    I happened to be listening to wingnut radio (trying to find a traffic report while stuck in freeway traffic) and listened to them replay the Obama + Key and Peele event. I had no idea they were all performing together in the same room, Obama playing the straight man. After seeing a video of the same (thanks to the Mahablog), I was struck at how completely humorless and clueless (once again) wingnuts are. It’s hard to know if the people who create wingnut radio really are that stupid, or if they really get the humor but just use any event to keep their base angry at Obama.

    Great posting btw, about who gets to be angry.

  5. If you want to focus on privilege, it seems that every positive social change alters the previous pattern in exchange for something more equitable. My conservative friends are in a bind. They can’t openly support the concept of privilege, but, on some level, they must realize that they have benefited from it. To acknowledge this advantage would be to admit that the achievements and circumstances by which they define themselves are largely the result of accident. So, they espouse the “Just World Hypothesis” because it allows them to maintain the belief that they are somehow more deserving than most,– harder working, morally superior, that sort of thing.

    Meanwhile they have to project themselves, to see themselves, as fair minded. I suppose the classic example was when conservatives opposed the Equal Rights Amendment because it would give women the “privilege” of having their rights defined by a law, whereas we poor, put upon, white men just had a few millennia of patriarchal tradition to help us along, and of course, our own bootstraps. But, the thread runs forward through current debates on the rights of LGBT people and women. It’s an old schtick, still reliable at times.

    The anger of people without privilege is especially threatening because it might give the game away. So the anger must be tainted in some way. Anger in and of itself, may not be rational, but given certain causes, anger can be a rational response, particularly when the cold light of reason has clearly and repeatedly failed. So, it is best and most effective to withhold the privilege of anger itself. Why take chances?

    For obvious reasons, one of David Brooks’ classic columns comes to mind. In the column, Brooks, a sort of modern Petronius Arbiter of all things right and reasonable, describes the occasion of watching three Toyota Prius’ approach a single vacant parking space at the same time. A conflict resulted, which served as a clear example, to the pure of heart and perspicacious, of “liberal anger.”
    In my mind, the column still stands as a high water mark in the history of nonsense and vapidity. And he probably just tossed it off between his morning brioche and the respectable rose he sipped at brunch. The man has a gift.

Comments are closed.