For those of you who may have had comments on my post from the Men's Basketball thread on the possibility of Wessel redshirting, in which the question of whether people tend to compare players based on race, I have posted my comment again here:
Apart from race, people on this thread have seen reasons to compare Wessel and Hatch (work ethic, height, etc.) and reasons to contrast them (point guard skills, etc.). But might race not be a factor too? I'm not saying it is or isn't in this particular case. I honestly don't know.
On a more general societal level, at least some people see issues of race involved in almost every social interaction. At least some other people see it involved in almost none of them (and complain when the former group play the "race card"). My question is: If someone were to do an empirical study of all of the comparisons that people (not just those involved with ShockerNet or in this thread) make between up-and-coming and already established players on both internet fan sites and in broadcast booths (and in newspapers as well), I wonder what you would you find. Would you find that American basketball fans generally compare people with those of like races? How strong (or weak) would the tendency be, if it showed up at all? In some ways we are a much more color-blind society than at any other point in our nation's history, but in other ways racism may still with us in more subtle ways. I'm not saying that this is one of them, but it would be interesting to see if it actually is on a society-wide basis.
Apart from race, people on this thread have seen reasons to compare Wessel and Hatch (work ethic, height, etc.) and reasons to contrast them (point guard skills, etc.). But might race not be a factor too? I'm not saying it is or isn't in this particular case. I honestly don't know.
On a more general societal level, at least some people see issues of race involved in almost every social interaction. At least some other people see it involved in almost none of them (and complain when the former group play the "race card"). My question is: If someone were to do an empirical study of all of the comparisons that people (not just those involved with ShockerNet or in this thread) make between up-and-coming and already established players on both internet fan sites and in broadcast booths (and in newspapers as well), I wonder what you would you find. Would you find that American basketball fans generally compare people with those of like races? How strong (or weak) would the tendency be, if it showed up at all? In some ways we are a much more color-blind society than at any other point in our nation's history, but in other ways racism may still with us in more subtle ways. I'm not saying that this is one of them, but it would be interesting to see if it actually is on a society-wide basis.
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