Sue has been researching microaggression since 2007 and has written two books on the subject. |
|
Both of these conditions subject you to lots of microaggression in today's society. |
|
When I read about microaggression and sexual assault on campus I question the lessons that we teach our children from the get-go. |
|
This unintentional racism, typically exposed through questions treating a person as different from the norm, is microaggression. |
|
When a potential microaggression occurs, the recipient is placed in a very unenviable position, or a catch-22. |
|
Keep on raging against the machine and protesting every single microaggression you witness. |
|
Yes, one microaggression alone is a small event, but they don't wash away after they occur, they add up. |
|
It's hard to not read that as a microaggression, because some days I am indeed practically living on caffeinated fructose. |
|
Will discussion of evolution in a biology class be a microaggression against a creationist? |
|
A street artist is responding to the microaggression of people feeling free to pass remarks to passing strangers. |
|
The researchers found that approximately 78 percent of the participants reported some form of racial microaggression within the two-week time frame. |
|
While some of these experiences may seem brief and harmless, many studies have found that microaggression can trigger symptoms of depression and psychological distress. |
|
Both are women who have excelled in male-dominated fields and who have doubtless encountered their own versions of microaggression, quite possibly outright sexism too, but have survived and thrived. |
|
Wilson had reintroduced segregation into the federal workplace and as such all reference to him was an offensive act of microaggression to the protesters. |
|