Let's talk about that lowercase "white."
Restructuring policing will take years. Many more Confederate monuments remain standing than have come down. But in these past few earthshaking months, one change has advanced with startling speed: Social upheaval has suddenly and widely restored a capital B to the word "Black."
I say "restored," because that capital B appeared in the 1970s. I used it myself. Then editors, uncomfortable with both the odd combination of uppercase "Black" and lowercase "white," and the unfamiliar, bumpy "Black and White," took off both capital letters. "Black" returned to "black."
In the wake of massive George Floyd and Black Lives Matter protests, however, media outlets and journalist associations are re-embracing the capital B. The Associated Press, New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Star Tribune and many others took the step. Even Fox News joined the crowd. The most common motive can be summed up as respect. To many, the case for capitalizing "Black" seemed obvious.
But what about "white"?
I had been inclined toward the new formula: capital B for "Black"; lowercase w for "white" and lowercase b for "brown" (another important question to resolve) — but with serious reservations.
My initial thinking: When I compare the cultural, intellectual and historical heft of the three categories, "Black" comes out well ahead of "white" and "brown." We have whole libraries of books and articles about "Blackness," world-beating traditions of music and literature, even entire academic departments 30 to 50 years old specializing in African American/black studies. Compared with blackness, whiteness and brownness are severely undertheorized.
But, in a June statement, the National Association of Black Journalists articulated a different view, stating, "NABJ also recommends that whenever a color is used to appropriately describe race then it should be capitalized, including White and Brown." Such a recommendation from the leading organization representing black journalists should give anyone pause.