I’ve realized that I’m not finished talking about the Bruce Emery conviction.
One of the main arguments back and forth about the Emery/Cameron case is whether Bruce Emery has benefited from privilege; that as a white middle-aged man from what is inexpertly called the middle class, he has been treated better by the justice system and by New Zealand than would have been the case for a different sort of person.
One of the things I’ve seen over and over in response to this is, “I’ve seen nothing that proves he was treated differently”. This question irritates me profoundly, and my immediate response is “Of course you haven’t! That’s the wrong starting point!”.
Privilege and prejudice in society don’t work in obvious ways. They can’t – anything that is obvious and indisputable gets challenged and purged from the system quickly. There isn’t ever going to be one clear moment of bias where patriachal/white/age-based privilege gets caught in the act, and demanding proof of one is setting the bar too high. Privilege can, and does, act in our society without ever meeting such a gross test of existence.
Instead, you need to look at the whole picture, the cumulative effect of many small points and angles. Indeed, to continue the analogy, you need to consider things outside of the picture too – how has this been framed, and what sits outside of the frame?
In the case of Bruce Emery, I don’t think there’s any question that the public view of the man and his crime reflects his privileged status in New Zealand’s culture. In the media coverage, similarly, I think this privilege comes through. In the trial itself and its outcome – well, the more specific you get, the harder it is to be definite, and I wasn’t at the trial so this can only be a guess – but a trial reflects and is part of the wider cultural conversation, so I think there’s likely to be some degree of privilege there as well.
The points and angles I’m talking about? There are plenty. Here’s a couple:
The main piece of media coverage from the NZ Herald, one of the most important articles about the case as it happened. Headline: The day Bruce Emery saw red. Just consider for a moment how that headline minimises what happened: a man grabbed a knife and chased some people down a street then stabbed one of them, and this amounts to “seeing red”. Consider now all the many other ways they could have headlined that article. WIthout even going beyond those six words you have a very particular framing that aligns perfectly with the expected effects of privilege. Would another man, a Maori or a Somali or a petty criminal like the exonerated David Dougherty, have been given that headline?
More: what about the widespread media coverage of Emery being denied the chance to spend Christmas with his family after being convicted of manslaughter? How often do we care about whether people convicted of serious crimes don’t get to go home for Christmas? Would the NZ media really have found this newsworthy if Emery wasn’t who he was? Would we get big pieces like this about the pain his family will suffer without him being there to open presents?
Specifically about the trial, another comment I’ve seen made frequently was that the stabbing happened under “disputed circumstances”. Which, of course, it did; the same is true of nearly every murder/manslaughter trial, because that’s how the adversarial system works. The prosecution and defence offer alternative versions of events and the jury and/or judge have to consider if they have reasonable doubt about guilt. The thing that sets these disputed circumstances apart is that one version is by a witness to what happened, and the other version is by the killer. Somehow, this close-up eyewitness account has been balanced by the killer’s own version, and somehow now the truth will never be known. If the eyewitness wasn’t a young brown tagger, would his story be given so little credibility against the killer’s version, not just in court but in the media coverage and the conversations in pubs and on blogs? If it was a white kid from the North Shore playing at being naughty, would his version somehow become more believable?
(Yes, of course there was physical evidence that the blow wasn’t deep, etc. That is hardly proof that Emery’s version is accurate.)
Consider Miri’s comments from a lawyer’s point of view about how far Emery was from meeting the legal criteria for self-defence or provocation; and yet how those two words drive the public conversation about him. If Emery were different, would these words have gained such purchase?
Consider the whole way the sentencing of Emery has been mixed up with the Cameron family’s parenting failures. That should be a completely separate conversation, but it’s being leveraged in because of who Emery is and who Cameron is, and it quietly shifts responsibility away from Emery. Would this really happen if Emery was someone different?
There’s plenty more, of course. This is the way privilege works; this is the kind of thing it does. It’s subtle, and up close any one instance of it can be argued either way. It’s a pattern, though, a consistent push in one direction over and over again. It can’t be put on a slide or proved in a blog post – if it could be demonstrated so easily it would not be allowed to happen. This means, however, that identifying it, being convinced of its existence, is about awareness of a big picture, about drawing inferences and conclusions. But you can’t start investigating those inferences without asking good questions, and checking expectations at the door.
(For those who don’t know me in real life: I’m a white, middle-class male. I operate in a sea of privilege and benefit from it every day; I’m hardly the best person to write about privilege. But what the heck.)
9 thoughts on “More on Emery”
Comments are closed.
Yeah, privilege is revealed in the assumptions made that underlie the questions we ask. And the questions asked determine the answers received.
Hey morgue, us white middle-class males have to stick together.
Oh. Wait. What did I just say.
I think being one of them (us?) makes you an ideal candidate for pointing this out. It eliminates a whole bunch of arguments of the form “you’re just jealous of my unearned privilege” that take time to beat around.
Also intriguing is my (quite possibly incorrect), impression that those seeking to minimise Emery’s actions (and, essentially blame the victim- cf Talkback), are the very same same proponents of the Right’s ‘tough on crime’ agenda…
I think your comment about the headline is the most interesting. The headline takes Emery as the focus not the victim. It potentially seeks to make a victim out of Emery. So is the media catering to what they believe their perceived audience to be or are they attributing privilege to Emery because of his standing in society?
Your excellent arguement over these last couple of posts is also reflected well if we were to compare and contrast the media coverage of this Bruce Emery case, and the coverage of Lipine Sila’s case – he’s the young guy who was convicted of murder and sentenced to 17 years non-parole for the murder of two girls by driving into a crowd in May 2007.
Sila’s case was also “disputed circumstances” – he was also maintaining self-defense and panic when things got out of control.
But the empathy, the understanding of Sila’s case is almost completely absent from the media coverage. Perhaps even more notably, some of those who have been baying for Emery to be treated lightly were the same people baying for Sila’s blood and demanding more satisfaction for the victims: see Stephen Frank’s rant here: http://www.stephenfranks.co.nz/?p=380
The title of your first post said it all – failure of empathy. These people can empathise with Emery, but why not Sila? What’s the difference between the two? Both disputed facts, both people out of their depth in situations not of their own making, both people who, in the heat of the moment, did something they’re going to regret for ever. But, in the media, amongst the get tough on crims crowd, amongst talkback there’s a huge difference in how Emery and Sila are viewed.
One can’t but conclude that the difference between them is that Emery is middle class, middle aged and white. And Sila was from a poorer background, young and Polynesian.
There’s one thing I’ve been wondering about amid all the doublespeak around this. As mentioned in your previous post, there’s been talk about “parenting failures” in letting a 15 year old out so late.
When people reading this were 15, what time were you out until on a Saturday night?
I’ve gone looking for exactly what time this happened and what I found was “after the Saturday night movie” and that Bruce Emery’s house was “33 houses” away from Pihema Cameron’s.
So it sounds to me like it was before midnight on a Saturday night and that this 15 year old boy was just down the street from his house.
Would YOUR parents have “controlled” you from going a few minutes down the road with a mate on a Saturday night? Should they have?
Maybe the tough on crime mob are seeing Emery’s act as a response to a criminal act – and the kind of response that their somewhat disturbing mentality views as appropriate.
One of my classes is reading ‘On the Sidewalk Bleeding’ at the moment, a short story about a 16-year-old being stabbed in a gang fight. We had an interesting discussion after reading the ‘seeing red’ Herald article.
– 5 students thought manslaughter was a good call
– 5 students thought it should have been murder
– 10 students didn’t want to/couldn’t be bothered sharing an opinion
and 2 students thought Emery would be better off with a longer sentence (for murder) because he’s going to be killed by the victims friends/family as soon as he gets out.
Jarrat, the difference in tha cases was that Sila was lying, alleging that he was scared. He and his brother started the trouble and revelled in it. The fight finished. Sila paused for a while, then drove in anger, deliberately swerving into the crowd at the party, 150m away from his fight.
Being brown was irrelevent. One of the seriously injured victims was a brown Samoan, just like Sila.
He was not teated differently in the media or the court because of skin colour, but because he was a violent thug.
He had previous convictions for violence and subsequent convictions for more violence in prison.
You may have a point about empathy, but Sila is the wrong man to use as a comparison.