De-whitening consent amidst COVID-19 rhetoric

Lamiyah Bahrainwala, Kate Lockwood Harris

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This article exposes four white-supremacist tactics embedded within extant consent discourse that became increasingly mobilized through the COVID-19 pandemic. These tactics include discourses of militarism as well as the dismissal of Black autonomy, reproductive access, and disability within existing consent rhetoric. We argue that these tactics create renewed exigence for de-whitening consent, and we build such a de-whitened consent framework by applying rhetorical scholarship on sexual violence to the 2020 Michigan anti-lockdown extremist protests, which were largely undertaken by white men. By exposing the white-supremacist tactics visible in these extremist protests, we highlight how pandemic-related rhetorics of bodily autonomy apply differently to Black, Muslim, disabled, trans, and migrant populations, and thus offer a de-whitened consent framework as a tool to chip away at white supremacist discourse.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)309-330
Number of pages22
JournalQuarterly Journal of Speech
Volume109
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 National Communication Association.

Keywords

  • Consent
  • bodily autonomy
  • intersectionality
  • social-distancing
  • white supremacist violence

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