Culture Why Does White Always Go First in Chess? - Protests over racism have rekindled a discussion about whether chess promotes white privilege with its rule that the first move always goes to the player with the white pieces.

  • ⚙️ Performance issue identified and being addressed.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
Link (Archive)

Why Does White Always Go First in Chess?​

Protests over racism have rekindled a discussion about whether chess promotes white privilege with its rule that the first move always goes to the player with the white pieces.​

The Conversation
Published 20 July 2021
36BBEF96-75C9-49DE-9A7F-4B1F34446F78.jpeg

Who decided that white should always go first?​

Johann Löwenthal, a British master, put forth one of the first proposals of record to give white the obligatory first move. At the First American Chess Congress, held in New York in 1857, Löwenthal sent two letters to the secretary of the New York Chess Club, Frederick Perrin.

On page 84 of the congress’s proceedings, it refers to one of the letters by citing “the advisableness of always giving the first move, in published games, to the player of the white pieces…” This rule was not immediately adopted, and tournament organizers maintained flexibility on the first move. In the Fifth American Chess Congressin 1880, it was written on page 164 of the Code of Chess Laws, “The right of first move must be determined by lot. The player must always play with the white men.”
63D46B85-072D-4DF3-8148-D3CA2E93763C.jpeg

Wilheim Steinitz, the first world champion, repeated this idea in his 1889 book, “The Modern Chess Instructor,” where he wrote on page XII: “The players draw by lot for move and choice of color. In all international and public Chess matches and tournaments, however, it is the rule for the first player to have the white men.”

Thus, there was a growing consensus that white should move first.

Was that decision rooted in racism?​

I am not aware of any direct evidence. However, chess players were not only part of the intelligentsia, but also men of their times. On page X in the proceedings of the Sixth American Chess Congress in 1889, Steinitz poetically extolled the virtues of chess as being among the “intellectual pastimes of civilized nations.” This is a time when Europeans generally did not regard Africa as a place of civilization. For instance, five years earlier at the Berlin Conference of 1884, Europeans had begun to execute their colonial plan and “aim at instructing the natives and bringing home to them the blessings of civilization.”

Further, in the 19th century, there was an awful period of satirizing and dehumanizing Blacks through darkened minstrel caricatures. There existed the perceptionthat white was associated with that which was positive, and black was associated with that which was negative. Recent social science research shows that this perception still holds.

Does the rule give white an advantage?​

It is my view that chess players, including grandmasters, overstate white’s first-move advantage.

Russian grandmaster Evgeny Sveshnikovstated back in 1994 that a player should win with white and be content to draw with black.
FF79FE96-07D0-4ECC-9DFA-5ED096780F4B.jpeg
As early as 1939, American master Weaver Adams claimed white is winning after the very first move, at least when that first move was the pawn to the e4 square – that is, the square three spaces in front of white’s king. But he ended up losing a match to I.A. Horowitz, who wanted to prove a point by taking black in every game.


Since A.D. 1475, white’s overall winning percentage has been approximately 55% in nearly 1 million games. This includes percentage of total wins plus half the percentage of drawn games. Is this result because of the first move itself? Steinitz seemed to suggest otherwise when he stated on page XXXII in his classic book, “Modern Chess Instructor,” “by best play on both sides, a draw ought to be the legitimate result.”

How would things change if black moved first?​

6BB2D268-966D-45B3-98F1-2F4781CE47C1.jpeg

In 2019, Magnus Carlsen and Anish Giri – who as of July were the number 1 and number 10 players in the world, respectively – promoted a #MoveforEquality campaignas a way of acknowledging social inequalities. In their game, black moved first and the line was, “We broke a rule in chess today, to change minds tomorrow.” It was billed as an anti-racist statement, but some took it as a suggestion to change the rules of chess to black having the first move.

If black moved first, it would take some getting used to for players who are accustomed to white going first. This would be especially true for the opening moves, since the white and black chess armies are positioned slightly differently. For instance, as white, the queen is on the left-hand side. As black, the queen is on the right-hand side.

As it exists now, the lighter color always moves first. Some see this as analogous to racial privileges in society. The late Frances Cress-Welsing, a psychiatrist, made a chess analogy in her “Cress Theory of Color Confrontation,” noting that the psychology of white having the first move was as the natural aggressor against black forces.

Socially speaking, an ideal solution would be to give both colors a 50% chance to move first. That is the way it was in shatranj, a precursor to modern-day chess. Instead of picking which player gets the favorable color, something like a coin toss would determine which color gets to move first. Of course, this would be “equal opportunity” but result in a totally different approach to playing chess.

What are the psychological effects of white going first?​

5D44D890-F225-4A64-B2D3-EC867E2343EA.jpeg
There are several psychological factors at play. A beginner of chess learns the power of “white first” very quickly. They will see that an opponent will prefer the white pieces if given a choice. They feel a sense of empowerment even when they are playing a stronger opponent. For this reason, players who play white may be more motivated to win. Conversely, we have been conditioned to believe that black should be content with a draw.

This relegation of black to an inferior status has been reinforced in many ways. The early chess books focused on how to exploit the white advantage over black. It was an attempt to show the power of the first-move privilege.

When one looks at chess books, the diagrams are generally positioned to be from the white army’s perspective. This is even true for books focusing on strategic systems for black. However, the seminal “Black is OK” series by Hungarian grandmaster András Adorján feature diagrams from the black perspective and provides a theoretical framework for why black has adequate resources.

In many of the chess puzzles, it was common to see each problem presented as white who has the winning sequence. In fact, Theophilus Thompson (1855-1881), the first Black player of note, had authored such a book of chess puzzles.

To a great extent, books are still published in this fashion. I believe that strategic literature for a black response will continue to increase, and the game will move closer to a 50-50 result in the “white first” format. There are a great many systems where black seeks to be the aggressor.

Chess is more of a conversation where both sides engage in a battle of ideas. Someone has to initiate the conversation, but throughout the flow of the game, a unique story unfolds. In my view, it is not about who starts first, but what the essence of the story ends up being.
The Conversation
 
Amazing! These guys can find "racism" anywhere! Now how about the keys on the piano? Those are just oozing with "racism"!
And of course, we all know that only whites play with the white pieces and blacks with the black ones.
These people need to touch grass.
 
"Chess players in the 1800s were often smart dudes, and smart dudes in the 1800s were occasionally racist. Checkmate, chess may be racist"

The absolute state of modern journalism and fact checking sites.
 
Yet another example of a literal joke becoming a supposed example of how society is secretly ran by the KKKNazis out to screw over all black people.
 
White moves first, meaning that it starts the war. If you have black move first, you have black start the war, which means you're saying that black people are responsible for their own colonization! Fuck you, you racist bigot!
 
Imagine being a supposed 'fact checking' site and posting this kind of insanity

Especially considering where chess was invented and after making absurd statements about how things would be difference if black went first. The board and pieces are identical. There would be no difference even if you did allow black to go first

These people are ignorant fanatics who are clearly racist
 
There are a great many systems where black seeks to be the aggressor.
Now that's a random.txt quote.

Imagine being a supposed 'fact checking' site and posting this kind of insanity
They just reposted an article from The Conversation; the same thing we do here except without licensing it.
 
Utter retardation. When you look at a snapshot of a chess match in progress, you can determine which player moved first just by the colour of the pieces.

If you wanted to change to an "any colour moves first" system, you would need to put that information in somewhere, either with text or a little symbol or something.

The current system is obviously better and more elegant. The information is already present simply by virtue of having a convention.

Also, he accepts in the article that there's no direct evidence that the convention is racist, or rooted in racism (but still wrote an article predicated on that assumption??). So he's literally proposing making the rules of the game inferior, for absolutely no reason.

Fucking race grifters man.
 
Amazing! These guys can find "racism" anywhere! Now how about the keys on the piano? Those are just oozing with "racism"!
And of course, we all know that only whites play with the white pieces and blacks with the black ones.
These people need to touch grass.
To be fair, I made racist jokes about that rule a few times as a kid.

I would be interested in a comprehensive study on the asymmetric nature of chess though, particularly the placement of the king and queen. It's a mirror reflection so the king is on the right for white and the left for black. The overall impact is probably minor but I wouldn't doubt that gives one or the other a similar edge to white going first.
 
Because White is better, duh.

I`m surprised there`s no option for the black king to sell his pawns to the whites.
 
And yet they have nothing to tell us about the racist dynamics of the Asian version of the game (called Go).

However, black makes the first move in Go and it was invented by Asians, so I guess it would be too problematic to try and make a problem out of it.
 
Why do black people think white people spend time sitting around thinking about them lol. We will completely ignore you if allowed, and no, the very basic light-dark dichotomy, which is actually almost surely because cavemen recognized day-night, is not something we’re going to abandon. People get what is meant by this contrast and nobody has actual jet black skin, or pure white skin. Nobody matches the chess pieces. You could just...decide this ain’t about you and finish eating your chicken and move on.
 
Despite making up just 13% of the population, blacks have claimed 50% of the chess board. I think they're fine.
 
And yet they have nothing to tell us about the racist dynamics of the Asian version of the game (called Go).

However, black makes the first move in Go and it was invented by Asians, so I guess it would be too problematic to try and make a problem out of it.
Pretty sure chess was invented by Asians too. It's one of those things that Indian's won't let you forget.
 
There's no reason a black guy can't play the white side of the board....

The arrogance to assume anything to do with the color black means YOU, you who's skin is not really black.... but a color colloquially known as black... it's as dumb as assuming I identify with white sheets of paper even though they don't match my skin color at all.... even if I am a pasty dude.
 
Back
Top Bottom