,

White Woman Discovers Racism

In the latest episode of Red Table Talk, Jada Pinkett Smith, alongside her mother, Adrienne Banfield Norris, hosted former Sex and the City star Kristin Davis for a probing, earnest talk about the complications of transracial adoption. Suggested Reading How Bakari Sellers Just Got the Ultimate Revenge on His MAGA CNN Colleague Take a Peek…

In the latest episode of Red Table Talk, Jada Pinkett Smith, alongside her mother, Adrienne Banfield Norris, hosted former Sex and the City star Kristin Davis for a probing, earnest talk about the complications of transracial adoption.

Video will return here when scrolled back into view
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?

Titled โ€œShould White People Adopt Black Kids,โ€ the discussion featured Davis talking at length about her experiences as the mother of two black children: a 7-year-old daughter and an infant boy. While she dispels a few mythsโ€”โ€œThe biggest misconception is that thereโ€™s some kind of like, โ€˜Iโ€™d like a black child please, like that handbag over there,โ€ Davis explains, going into detail about the processโ€”a substantive part of the conversation focused on how Davis was forced to confront racism in a much different, much more personal way.

โ€œItโ€™s one thing to be watching [racism] happening to other people and itโ€™s another thing when itโ€™s your child. And you havenโ€™t personally been through it. Itโ€™s a big issue,โ€ Davis said.

She talked about one pivotal moment when she noticed her daughter wasnโ€™t being treated fairly during recess at her mostly white schoolโ€”Davis said when she raised her concerns with school administrators, they were summarily dismissed.

โ€œโ€˜We just see them all the same. We donโ€™t see color,โ€™โ€ Davis recalled school staff telling her.

โ€œIt was a very harsh moment of understanding,โ€ she continued. โ€œI donโ€™t know how every person of color has gotten through this. I donโ€™t understand how you could take this every day.โ€

Well, there is no opt-out button, which is the first and only thing. But while the quote is striking, itโ€™s not altogether shocking or novel. Sure, thereโ€™s an entire internet out there; sure, black people and people of color have laid out, for literally centuries, the myriad injuries and devastations, large and small, that come part and parcel with living in this country; sure, there is no shortage of sources capable of confirming this caste system in the present-day (in fact, one of the first places one ought to look is our education system).

That this information was available to Davis, but not rendered immediate or urgent until it was her own child facing these issues, is not surprising. I donโ€™t even think it makes her a bad person per se, though it certainly confirms her privilege.

What I find most striking is the function of these conversationsโ€”and the persistent public regurgitation of them. By the time I began writing this piece, Davisโ€™ Red Table Talk interview had been picked up by Newsweek, Blavity, CNN, People, and USA Today, just to name a few. Each summarizes Davisโ€™ and Pinkett Smithโ€™s discussion points, most of them centering on Davisโ€™ emotional response as she talked about her experiences (Most headlines were variations of โ€œKristin Davis Tears Up as...โ€ Syntactically, Davisโ€™ reactions were more newsworthy than her childโ€™s interactions with racism).

The subtext hinges on the power of contrast: If even a privileged, hyper-visible white woman (someone most famous for playing a privileged, hyper-idealistic white woman, at that) could both encounter and be devastated by racism, doesnโ€™t that show what a pervasive issue it is? But that framing raises another question: Why do you need a Kristin Davis to say it?

The mere existence of these conversationsโ€”and the earnest, exhaustive replays and recitations of themโ€”appear aimed at persuading some uncertain congregation to come to terms with the ways race shapes the country we live in. This collective, presumably, cares about equity and justice but is more likely to take the message to heartโ€”or, more likely to feel affirmedโ€”when the messenger is white.

At one point, Davis expands on her feelings about white saviorhood, acknowledging it as a problem while wrestling with her personal qualms about the term.

โ€œI donโ€™t want to say that thatโ€™s just a myth,โ€ Davis said, before adding โ€œItโ€™s not really what I come across so much...because are you saying then, โ€˜Donโ€™t try to do anything good because your skin is white?โ€™ Because thatโ€™s not going to work out.โ€

But white-savior narratives arenโ€™t problematic because they are centered on the goodness of white people, but because they continually posit white people (and a white perspective) as the most credible. A child is valuable when a white person evaluates her. Racism is real when a white person acknowledges it. Of course, when a Honduran migrant crosses the border to save his childโ€™s lifeโ€”an act that, in itself, affirms the value and possibility of that lifeโ€”he is a criminal. When a black mother works multiple jobs to feed her children, she is negligentโ€”or irresponsible for having the child in the first place.

I donโ€™t say this to dismiss Davisโ€™ storyโ€”not her shock, her pain, or her struggle. I donโ€™t at all question her bona fides as a mother: What is abundantly clear is that sheโ€™ll go through great lengths to protect, nurture, and raise up her black children in a country that has spent a great deal of its time and resources cutting those children down.

But I do wonder, why is it Davisโ€™ tears are considered so remarkable? And I do find it impossible to listen to stories like hers without thinking of the generations upon generations of people of colorโ€”black and Native people in particularโ€”who have said the very same things and begged this country, just once, to believe them.

Straight From The Root

Sign up for our free daily newsletter.