Above: promotional photo in the Winter 2021 University of Wisconsin-Madison alumni magazine, OnWisconsin. (This photo is not in the electronic version of the magazine. I took a photo of my hard copy of it).
***********
Is UW-Madison still “diversity doctoring” its promo photos in 2021?
Look carefully at the photo above (close up to the right).
Did the man in the red shirt really walk a few inches in front other guy (in the striped shirt behind the “A”) while happily looking the other way? (look at their feet). Would the guy in the striped shirt–who is about to crash into him–really be looking in another direction at this point?
Maybe these two men are simply not paying attention because they are so blissed-out to be at UW?
Or, maybe the Black man was photoshopped into the photo to make the predominantly white UW campus look more diverse, especially in regards to African Americans?
If so, it’s really appalling, but not surprising. It wouldn’t be the first time the University of Wisconsin-Madison did this.
In 2009–the same year I left my UW-Madison associate scientist position because I could no longer tolerate the sexism, racism, classism and corporate influences permeating the institution–Dr. Lisa Wade wrote about the university’s unethical “diversity doctoring” in its promo materials–which she calls the “commodification of diversity” (also called “cosmetic diversity,” “manufacturing diversity,” “diversity marketing,” and a number of other apt terms).
Be sure to read the debates in the comment section about the ethics of this practice–they’re both interesting and disturbing…
*******
In 2000, at the University of Wisconsin – Madison (UW), Diallo Shabazz was my student. He was a senior. At the very beginning of his Frosh year, someone snapped this picture:
From that point forward, Diallo was featured in UW promotional materials again and again. He became accustomed to seeing that smile everywhere. Because diversity has become such a popular, even trendy thing for a college to have, many students of color find themselves used as representatives of their colleges disproportionately.
But Shabazz’s story takes a fascinating turn. At the end of his senior year he paged through the next year’s application and didn’t see himself. Hmmm. Then, someone asked if he saw himself on the cover. And he looked and didn’t see it and then he did. Do you?
That’s Diallo behind the excited girl on the left. Except Diallo had never been to a UW football game. You might recognize his face, transposed, from the original picture. Indeed, someone at UW had photoshopped Diallo into the image below in order to give the impression that attendance at the game was more diverse than it was. No Diallo:
In that year 100,000 admission booklets went out with his face. More insidiously, 100,000 admission booklets went out using his face to give the illusion of diversity at the University of Wisconsin – Madison.
Diallo sued. He didn’t ask for a settlement. He said that he wanted a “budgetary apology.” He asked that, in compensation, the University put aside money for actual recruitment of minority students. He won. Ten million dollars was earmarked for diversity initiatives across the UW system. The irony in the whole thing is that UW requested photos of Shabazz shaking administrators’ hands in reconciliation (i.e., photographic proof that everything was just fine). Oh, and also, the Governor vetoed part of the earmark and many initiatives wore off with turnover.
What does this teach us?
First, notice that we have a commodification of diversity. It is considered useful for selling an institution.
Second, if real diversity isn’t possible, cosmetic diversity will do.
Third, Shabazz himself was dismissed even as his image was used over and over. Not only did they own the rights to his image and include him in many materials without the requirement that they ask or inform him, they literally took his image, cut it up, and used it to create a false picture. When Shabazz complained, they first tried to blow him off. So he wasn’t important to them, even as what he represented clearly was.
This suggests, fourth, that there was a real lack of a substantive dialog about and investment in race and diversity on the campus. Talk: difficult. Recruitment of minorities to a mostly white campus: tricky. Addressing the systematic educational underinvestment in minorities prior to arriving at UW: expensive. Retaining minorities in that environment: challenging. Photoshop: easy.
Macon D., at Stuff White People Do, featured a similar situation in which Toronto’s Fun Guide (badly) photoshopped a black man onto their cover because their “goal was to depict the diversity of Toronto and its residents” (story here) (images also sent in by fds and Michael G.):
Original photo:
All of this puts into some perspective the recent Microsoft scandal that Jon S. and Dmitriy T. M. asked us to blog about. If you were in the U.S. you would see the first image on the Microsoft webpage (with, as far as we know, real minorities) and, if you were in Poland, you would have seen the second image (with the black man replaced by a white man):
NEW! (Nov ’09):
Arturo Garcia pointed out that U.S. advertising for Couples Retreat included a black couple, but the advertising in the U.K. did not.
U.S. poster:
U.K. poster:
The willingness to play with the presence of minorities–both by photoshopping them in and out–suggests that companies are making strategic, not ethical, decisions about what kind of public face (forgive the pun) to put on. All of this avoids any real engagement with diversity itself. This is probably largely because diversity is a minefield. It’s incredibly difficult to even figure out how to define it, let alone how to build it, or how to manage it once you have it (something that my current institution struggles with). And yet, these are the things that we must do. Otherwise all of these strategic moves, both towards and away from minorities, are suspect.
NEW! In our comments, Jackie and Jasmine drew our attention to another example. This is from the University of Texas, Arlington:
See also our series on how people of color are included in advertising aimed primarily at white people, starting here.
If you’re really interested in these ideas, you might want to read MultiCultClassics, a blog specializing in how companies try to recruit minorities and present themselves as diverse institutions.
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Lisa Wade is a professor of sociology at Occidental College. You can follow her on Twitter and Facebook.
Lisa Wade, PhD is an Associate Professor at Tulane University. She is the author of American Hookup, a book about college sexual culture; a textbook about gender; and a forthcoming introductory text: Terrible Magnificent Sociology. You can follow her on Twitter and Instagram.
Comments 63
Jasmine — September 2, 2009
One blogger compiled a whole list of these, if you’d like more examples:
http://www.11points.com/Misc/11_Photos_Where_Black_People_Were_Awkwardly_Photoshopped_In_or_Out
Cedar — September 2, 2009
That Toronto Fun Guide is a terrible photoshop job! It honestly looks like a joke. The lighting is totally off, and the photoshopped in man sicks out terribly.
Laurel Fan — September 2, 2009
The ironic thing about the Toronto cover is that the original people look like they could be “diverse”, ie. not white. The white t shirts make their skin look darker, and to my untrained eye it looks like they could be Persian, Southeast Asian, mixed, etc…
Jackie — September 2, 2009
Here are a few more glaring examples of horrendous “diversity” marketing gone awry.
http://www.11points.com/Misc/11_Photos_Where_Black_People_Were_Awkwardly_Photoshopped_In_or_Out
Jackie — September 2, 2009
whoops should’ve read the first comment! props, Jasmine!
Craig — September 2, 2009
I want to stipulate that what Wisconsin did was ham-fisted, stupid, and lazy. But I think you go out of your way to attribute sinister motives where ham-fistedness, stupidity, and laziness may be perfectly adequate. More–to attribute sinister motives where the genuine intent may have been quite laudatory.
You claim that the intent behind the image manipulation was cynical and mercenary: “selling an institution.” This strikes me as quite harsh. Perhaps the point was to show that minorities are just as legitimately a part of the UW student body as whites–to reach out, in a small way, to minority prospective students opening the application in the mail. Ham fisted? Sure. Less than honest? Check. But at least Shabazz _was_ a student, and seemed happy for at least that one fraction of a second in 2000.
I think you should at least consider the possibility that someone in admissions wanted a “more diverse” image because that person considered diversity a _good thing_ and worth pursuing…even at the expense of some Potempkin Village Photoshopping.
As for the charge of “cosmetic diversity,” I grant at least part of the point. But isn’t the entire idea of this blog that images _matter_? If cosmetic racism and sexism are despicable, is not cosmetic diversity at least better than nothing? I don’t know the details, of course, but I imagine the Photoshopping was done by a fairly low-echelon functionary. In other circumstances, you might even call it a “subversive act”–a defiant statement that, damn it, African Americans are UW students, too.
On the third point, that a large state university doesn’t actually care very much about how it treats any individual student….well, yeah. Not going to argue with you on that one.
Citizenparables — September 2, 2009
@craig I agree that the intention (at UW) was probably laudable, the execution very hamfisted.
One alternative; staging a photo shoot with students, and including Mr Shabazz along with others – would that be especially better? It would, in that at least then Mr Shabazz would be conscious of his involvement.
However the real objection here seems to be less one of use of image without clearance, than of ‘manufactured diversity’. My question is; would that diversity be any more or less ‘manufactured’ if Mr. Shabazz was physically included in a photoshoot rather than digitally included?
Similarly, with the Toronto Fun Guide – yes, it is almost comically amateur Photoshopping. However, this is the combination of two stock photos, neither of which contain actual Toronto residents, presumably because it is manifestly cheaper than a professional photo shoot. I’m assuming that there are African-Canadian men living in Toronto, so, again, what if the city had paid four people to stand in that pose and took their photo, specifically casting one black person to reflect the genuine cultural diversity of the city? Better or worse?
I ask because it’s the use of photoshop that is the common factor here. It begs the question, is the means of manipulation somehow hotbuttoning these images more than the actual intention to manufacture? And at what point does the inclusion of minority faces in publicity material for a place that contains those minorities become ‘manufactured’ or ‘exploitative’?
Poppy — September 2, 2009
I would be interested to know what a person living in Poland would think of the Polish ad. Perhaps there is such a small percentage of coloured people in Poland that they changed the ad to make it look more Polish rather than American. This is not to dismiss the stupidity in Photoshopping out minorities – I just feel people are looking at this through American eyes.
I live in New Zealand, and the fact that you have put Asians and Pacific Islanders in the same tag group seems bizarre to me. We have large groups of both ethnicities in my city, and the ways in which they are culturally stereotyped are totally different, so it makes no sense to put them in the same group. I understand that the ethnicities represented are major groups in the U.S. – my point is, what seems logical to you seems ridiculous to me. It may be the same way for a Polish person regarding the Microsoft ad.
ispy — September 2, 2009
The Microsoft one is terrible on the technical side. The picture was originally of the black man, clearly, as they failed to photoshop the hand white in the second picture.
macon d — September 2, 2009
Thanks for the nod, Lisa, and especially for the further information on Diallo Shabazz — fascinating, sad, and sadly unsurprising.
rachel — September 2, 2009
Here is the thing: When you see a group of kids hanging out on a college campus, between classes, studying, football game…whatever…you don’t typically see a cluster of all white people with one black person. People tend to hang out in self-segregated groups, because despite the fact that the civil rights movement has gained a lot, we are still deeply divided by race. For this reason, black students would be more likely to hang out with each other, and would more likely hang out with white students if they weren’t the only black person in the group. In the same way, white students are going to stay in groups with other white students, and aren’t likely to hang out in groups in which they are the minority. Here’s the problem: the image that the promotions people want for their colleges include a big group of white students and one black student. Not a more thoroughly-mixed group, with multiple white and black people, and not a small group of a few black individuals. If they started to show those pictues, then prospective black students might see that there really is a community of black students at that school, and that might make them feel more comfortable with the school. BUT it might “turn off” the white prospective students (and their parents,) who certainly would never admit to being racist, but wouldn’t really want to attend a college with lots of black people. So the black tokenism in the college promotional materials might SEEM to be inclusive because there is a black student in the group, but what they are actually saying is, “Yeah, black folks can come here, that’s cool. but white folks, don’t worry: there are by far more of you/us.” Whether the photo is the result of photoshop or not, that is the thing that seems very troubling.
distance88 — September 2, 2009
The commodification of race is definitely creepy.
Tintin LaChance — September 2, 2009
Photoshop Disasters just put up another Polish example: http://photoshopdisasters.blogspot.com/2009/09/university-of-lublin-broken-token.html
Enrique Ruiz — September 3, 2009
It is amazing how in our diverse society we have corporations and ad agencies resorting to digital techniques to convey inclusionary practices. This is a forced visual inclusion tactic that indicates that we are still finding the meaning, and ways, to expand our collective business potential and benefits. Diversity & Inclusion is powerful. How difficult is it to reach out to a diverse population and get them engaged in a photo shoot that is real? This would mean far more to the people involved AND the readers.
Brooke — September 3, 2009
2 years ago, I was finishing up the college search thing with my eldest. We had a stack of college catalogs a yard high. and one of the games we played was “find the brother.” Every beautiful picture of cherry blossoms had a counterpart (sometimes magnolias, sometimes autumn leaves) and scattered lightly through were pictures of their student population. We made a chart of the photos by gender and ethnicity and also graphed the matching populations in the schools. Pretty funny charts, some of them. 😀 That information is all public record. It’s a sales tool.
Similarly, if you look at ballet school brochures, the one guy they’ve enticed into the building is always photographed, sometimes from more than one angle. Why? Because they want MORE guys, and if there’s picture after picture of only girls, you know they didn’t have one to photograph.
So, while I’m glad Mr. Shabazz busted them on using his photo thus generously, I don’t think the intent was particularly evil. “Commodification” is what salespeople DO. In the case of college brochures, they’re trying to get people to place themselves in the picture, alongside the ivy-covered walls, etc. And, frankly, you wouldn’t need to be a racial minority to want to hang somewhere the guy in that top picture was. It’s a great picture of a lovely young person. Be worth including, whatever the color of his (or your) skin.
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Matt — September 6, 2009
Manufactured diversity is a sham.
I see this on my school website, conveniently on the diversity page…It’s not that they doctored it. It’s that the pictures are not truly representative, which is just as bad.
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nola — September 25, 2009
I have some experience with this. I worked for the Annual Fund at my undergraduate university and they wanted a couple of us to pose for pictures around campus. I would say the group consisted of Blacks, Whites, and Hispanics. The pictures would be used on the thank you postcards that we send out to each donor. We took tons of pictures. Most of the pictures were group shots, but we also took some close ups. I never expected the final version to turn out the way it did. Instead of using the group shots, they chose solo shots of me, one of my male White coworkers, and an Asian girl that didn’t work for the Annual Fund. Many of my coworkers believed that they chose me because I have an “ethnically ambigious” look. I am Black, but light-skinned. Many people thought I was either bi-racial (Black and White) or Hispanic. Although I’m a New Orleans Creole, I mostly identify as Black, especially since many people outside of Louisiana don’t know what Creole is. Anyway…for awhile, I did’t agree with them. I felt that they chose me as a sort of “Token Black,” but I started to realize that they were probably right. By looking at my picture, most people probably wouldn’t be able to pin point my race, and students of varying races or ethnicities could see themselevs in me.
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I see that you follow Photoshop Disasters. You missed one from there, though, which is both particularly egregious and perpetrated by the US Government: http://photoshopdisasters.blogspot.com/2008/12/us-military-your-tax-dollars-at-work.html .
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amysterling — October 27, 2013
This just stinks.
Phil Gwinn — October 27, 2013
This is what happens when something worthwhile in its’ own right becomes politicized by some and stigmatized by others. What emerges is a politically correct standard. It would not surprise me to see that there were data dinks in the background using algorithms to determine the exact ratios of minorities to majorities per market to ensure the politically correct balance.
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BaSH PR0MPT — October 11, 2014
All posters forthwith and cover pages should had badly shooped ethnic minorities of the country the publication is released in edited in ad hoc and awkward positions for comic relief.
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Carolina Sander — April 17, 2017
Diversity is such a broad thing for women. Hey i would like to share this new fake ultrasound design. This is the best for gags. If you are looking for the best for parties then you can rely on this. For the laughs and shouts. Check this out now.
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Alex Reynard — September 22, 2019
Gosh, it’s almost as if woke campuses and movie studios want the self-back-patting of supporting minorities, without having to actually be around them.
Kinda like their attitude towards the poor!
Henry Ford — January 9, 2020
The same people who abhor this are the same people who push for diversity in every walk of life. Why does it even matter? Let us self segregate for gosh’s sake. You let other races do it, why move the goalposts for just us?
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