resistor
First Post
My point is, these things aren't interchangeable, since one gender has historically been subordinated to the other in many areas, including gaming. Think of it this way (and I'm not trying to play oppression olympics, just trying to intellectualize the issue): you (hopefully) wouldn't call Black History Month racist, or Women's History Month sexist. Because... well, every other month is about the pursuits of white men.
Actually, I have an issue with the idea behind BHM and/or WHM: they claim that some people's "differentness" is more important than other people's "differentness." I don't begrudge the existence of BHM/WHM per se, but I do resent the implication that certain heritages are more deserving of recognition than others.
I think the key phrase in your assertion is "the pursuits of white men." I'm going to hypothesize a bit here, but I do not believe that there is a single person in the world the entirety of whose identity is "white man." All those people you refer to as "white men" are American, or English, or Scottish, etc. Or maybe they identify by creed, or by profession, or by region of birth.
My issue with the concept of a unitary group of "white men" is that it implies that they are the default majority on everything, when for any particular is not. Every person is made up of so many different identity elements that the fraction of people who hold the majority identity on every single one is vanishingly small.
Who gets to decide which "heritages" are important enough to get months, and which aren't? So, why don't I have my Scottish heritage month? What about Southern pride? (OK, I knew people growing up for whom every day was Southern pride day, so that one might be a bit moot...) What about Catholics-in-the-USA?
I am white. I am male. But that is not who I am. I, too, have heritages that are part of my identity, and resent the implication that they're not important.