2018
DOI: 10.1111/cico.12345
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Problems Establishing Identity/Residency in a City Neighborhood during a Black/White Police–Citizen Encounter: Reprising Du Bois’ Conception of Submission as “Submissive Civility”

Abstract: This article revisits W.E.B. Du Bois' () conception of “The Submissive Man” in the context of a Black/White police‐citizen encounter. Du Bois argued that submission to democratic principles that place the well‐being of the whole over the individual is a Black American ideal, which offers a necessary counter‐balance to the individualism of the dominant White “Strong Man” ideal. We contrast this preference for “submission” and “cooperation” in dealing with racism with White American individualism, referring to t… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Furthermore, when persons in minority categories protest unequal treatment, White Others often treat their protest itself as suspicious. We see this in the incident examined by Rawls et al (2018), in which two White police officers lost their jobs after they unlawfully assaulted a Black man in the front yard of his North Carolina home. The assault, which took place after the officers verified the man’s identity and address, occurred after several tense minutes during which he protested his innocence.…”
Section: Theoretical Overviewmentioning
confidence: 92%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Furthermore, when persons in minority categories protest unequal treatment, White Others often treat their protest itself as suspicious. We see this in the incident examined by Rawls et al (2018), in which two White police officers lost their jobs after they unlawfully assaulted a Black man in the front yard of his North Carolina home. The assault, which took place after the officers verified the man’s identity and address, occurred after several tense minutes during which he protested his innocence.…”
Section: Theoretical Overviewmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…The assault, which took place after the officers verified the man’s identity and address, occurred after several tense minutes during which he protested his innocence. As Rawls et al (2018) show, the officers interpreted his assertions of innocence themselves as suspicious, because they did not expect an innocent person to be so anxious. This incident reflects a broader pattern of police violation of Trust Conditions, as police question the everyday social status of Black citizens.…”
Section: Theoretical Overviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The information about the categories identified and their relationships to the observer(s) stem from the contexts within which encounters unfold. The police officer who pulls over an anonymous speeder behaves differently only once she learns of the police chief's presence behind the wheel, or if the encounter reveals racial differences (see Rawls et al., 2018). The mother who sees a toddler scamper into the ocean's waves responds immediately upon realizing her own child is in danger 2 .…”
Section: Bringing Sentient Cognitive Humans Back Inmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this view, the individual-society connection is relatively remote, abstract, and impersonal (Danziger 1990), rather than close, intimate, or co-constitutive. To consider anew how the ''behavior of an individual'' is concretely relational, social psychology needs autism, where it is useful to examine somewhat extreme cases, such as those in this paper, although they may be related to other forensic (see e.g., Duck 2017;Rawls, Duck, and Turowetz 2018) and clinical environments involving different identities. The cases here exhibit how clearly identifiable and professionally-based antecedent actions are inseparable from subsequently construed violative behaviors of the individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD).…”
Section: Why Social Psychology Needs Autism and Why Autism Needs Socimentioning
confidence: 99%