Microaggressions
What are microaggressions?
Microaggressions are the everyday verbal, nonverbal and environmental slights, snubs or insults targeted towards people from marginalized groups based on race, gender, sexual orientation, disability status, religious affiliation or other perceived characteristic.
Whether intentional or unintentional, they communicate hostile, derogatory or negative messages that demean a person or a group鈥檚 humanity.
Read further to better understand everyday interpersonal microaggressions, some of which are related to broader policies and environmental cues.
What are the types of microaggressions?
| Type of microaggressions | Example |
|---|---|
| Microinequities are overt and discriminatory. They can be explicit verbal or nonverbal attacks intended to hurt a victim based on their identity or identities shown through name calling, avoidant behaviour or purposeful discriminatory actions. | Deliberately servicing a White patron first before a racialized person. |
| Microassaults are subtle forms of rude or insensitive communication鈥搖sually not recognized as such by a perpetrator鈥搕hat demean a person鈥檚 identity or identities. They can be considered as back-handed compliments. | Telling a racialized person born in Canada that their 鈥淓nglish is really good.鈥 |
| Microinvalidations are communications that discredit the thoughts, feelings or experiences of people from marginalized groups. They can also be actions that result in exclusion and a lack of belonging. | A racialized person tells their White friend about a situation where they felt discriminated against and are told to 鈥渟top being so sensitive.鈥 The absence of Black narratives in curriculum. |
The themes of a specific microaggression vary depending on the targeted group or person. Here are some examples of common microaggression themes against specific groups of people:
| Theme | Microaggression | Message |
|---|---|---|
| Alien in one鈥檚 land |
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| Ascription of intelligence |
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| Colour blindness |
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Criminality鈥揳ssumption of criminal听status |
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Denial of individual听racism/sexism |
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| Ableism |
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| Myth of meritocracy |
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| Pathologizing cultural values and communication styles 听 |
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| Second-class citizen |
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| Sexist/heterosexist language |
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| Traditional gender role prejudicing and stereotyping |
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How can microaggressions cause harm?
Microaggressions create inequities in society that leave people from marginalized groups at a disadvantage. They are not just simple comments that put another person down. They are targeted comments or actions in response to someone鈥檚 perceived identity.
Microaggressions are a form of constant and continual harm against people from marginalized groups that occur throughout their lives.
Microaggressions are cumulative and create conflict and dilemmas for people from marginalized groups. Because they occur so often, they create labour as they are continually deciphered. Studies have shown that this impacts people鈥檚 productivity, concentration and well-being.
How can we address microaggressions?
- Assume that you have your own biases. None of us were raised without inheriting some racial, gender or sexual orientation biases from the previous generations.
- Speak out when microaggressions occur. Simply acknowledging a microaggression does not delegitimize it.
- Acknowledge and understand your own privilege. Some of us hold and yield power differently based on our social location, and those with more power over others must move towards systemic action that helps combat these inequities.
- Recognize the importance of education. Whether through self-education or by promoting education for children and teens in school, preventing implicit biases can be done through intentional, anti-biased and multicultural curriculums.
- Do not shy away from discomfort when listening to the lived experiences of people who are different from you.
- Acknowledging, understanding and supporting other people鈥檚 differences from you will help legitimize their experience and also help you achieve insights about yourself that will strengthen your solidarity.
How can we confront microaggressions?
Safety comes first. So before confronting microaggressions, ensure that you are safe and that it is safe to do so.
Make the invisible visible
- undermine the offender鈥檚 action
- point out the offender鈥檚 action
- challenge the stereotype
- broaden the ascribed trait to a universal human behaviour
- ask for clarification
Disarm the microaggression
- express disagreement
- state values and set limits against the offender
- describe what is happening out loud
- interrupt and redirect
Educate the offender
- point out the commonality
- appeal to the offender鈥檚 values and principles
- differentiate between intent and impact
- promote empathy
- point out how the offender benefits
Seek external validation
- alert authorities
- report the act
- seek therapy/counselling
- seek support through spirituality, religion, community or support group
- set up a buddy system
Self-educate to learn more
Microaggressions in Everyday Society with Dr. Sue
(February 2015)
In, Dr. Derald Wing Sue joined Dr. Denise O'Neil Green for an interactive conversation about best practices and strategies for disrupting microaggressions in postsecondary education and society.
91福利 Dr. Sue
Dr. Sue is Professor of Psychology and Education at Columbia University. He is one of the foremost authorities and scholars in the areas of microaggressions, multicultural counselling and psychotherapy, psychology of racism and antiracism, cultural diversity, cultural competence and multicultural organizational development.
Unpacking microaggressions series in 91福利 Today
Books for kids
Books for teens
Resources for adults
References
Rini, R. (2021). The ethics of microaggression. Routledge.
Sue, D. W., & Spanierman, L. (2020). Microaggressions in everyday life (Second; 2nd; ed.). John Wiley & Sons.
Sue, D. W., Capodilupo C.M., Torino G.C., Bucceri J.M., Holder A.M., Nadal K.L., Esquilin M. Racial microaggressions in everyday life: implications for clinical practice. Am Psychol. 2007 May-Jun;62(4):271-86. doi: 10.1037/0003-066X.62.4.271. PMID: 17516773.