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2. Black Women and the Changing Television Landscape: LISA M. ANDERSON, 2023, New York, NY, Bloomsbury Academic, pp. x + 165, illus. (black and white), $80.00 (cloth), $22.95 (paper).
- Author
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Biano, Ilaria
- Subjects
- *
WOMEN on television , *BLACK women , *BLACK people , *LANDSCAPE changes , *TELEVISION situation comedies - Abstract
"Black Women and the Changing Television Landscape" by Lisa M. Anderson is a book that examines the portrayal of Black women on television throughout history. Anderson, an associate professor of women and gender studies, builds on her previous work to explore the complex and evolving representations of Black women in media. Using a semiotic approach and drawing on the work of Black feminist scholars, Anderson analyzes specific television shows and personalities from the 1950s to the present. The book goes beyond simplistic judgments and aims to understand the historical and cultural contexts in which these representations exist, as well as the agency of Black women in shaping them. It is a valuable resource for scholars in cultural, media, and television studies. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A Black American Missionary in Canada: The Life and Letters of Lewis Champion Chambers: edited by Hilary Bates Neary, Montreal, McGill-Queen's University Press, 2022, 296 pp., CAN $37.95 (paper), ISBN 978-0-2280-1447-8.
- Author
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Broyld, dann j.
- Subjects
- *
AFRICAN Americans , *CANADIAN history , *BLACK people , *AMERICAN Civil War, 1861-1865 , *MISSIONARIES - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Race and Radio: Pioneering Black Broadcasters in New Orleans: BALA JAMES BAPTIST, 2019, Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, pp. xiv + 152, $35 (paper).
- Author
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Wan, Shu
- Subjects
- *
BLACK people , *RACE , *RADIO audiences , *AMERICAN civil rights movement - Abstract
"Race and Radio: Pioneering Black Broadcasters in New Orleans" by Bala James Baptist is a book that explores the emergence and evolution of Black radio culture in the American South, specifically in New Orleans. The author examines the interactions between white business owners, pioneering Black disc jockeys, and the African American community, highlighting their contributions to the promotion of Black radio in postwar American society. The book also discusses the role of Black radio personalities in the Civil Rights Movement and the growth of Black-owned radio stations. Based on primary sources, the book provides valuable insights into the transformation of radio culture in New Orleans and its impact on racial equality. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Biographical Dictionary of Enslaved Black People in the Maritimes: by Harvey Amani Whitfield, Toronto, University of Toronto Press, 2022, 236 pp., CAN $34.95 (paper), ISBN: 978-14875-4382-2.
- Author
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Clare, Rod
- Subjects
- *
BLACK people , *CANADIAN history , *ENSLAVED persons , *AFRICAN American history - Abstract
One is that Whitfield does not provide a map of the Maritimes, or even a proper definition, of where and what the Maritimes are. I Biographical Dictionary of Enslaved Black People in the Maritimes i by Dr. Harvey Amani Whitfield, Professor of Black North American history at the University of Calgary, is a superlative book that sheds light on and gives acknowledgment to those enslaved in the Maritimes across the 18 SP th sp and 19 SP th sp centuries. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Unsettling the Great White North: Black Canadian History: Edited by Michele A. Johnson and Funké Aladejebi, Toronto, University of Toronto Press, 2022, 632 pp., CAN $34.95 (paper), ISBN: 978-1-4875-2917-8.
- Author
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Tardif, Cameron
- Subjects
- *
BLACK Canadians , *COLONIES , *ANTHOLOGIES , *CANADIANS , *MYTHOLOGY , *BLACK people - Abstract
In I Unsettling the Great White North: Black Canadian History i , editors Michele A. Johnson and Funké Aladejebi have brought together 23 writers to produce a masterful and richly colored tapestry of Black Canadian history. Section two, "Constructing Blackness across Borders and Boundaries", sheds light on Blackness and the identity formation process of African North Americans vis-à-vis the US-Canada border. Unsettling the Great White North: Black Canadian History: Edited by Michele A. Johnson and Funké Aladejebi, Toronto, University of Toronto Press, 2022, 632 pp., CAN $34.95 (paper), ISBN: 978-1-4875-2917-8. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. "Nothing Less than Full Freedom" Radical Immigrant Newspapers Champion Black Civil Rights.
- Author
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Zecker, Robert M.
- Subjects
AFRICAN American civil rights ,CIVIL rights movements ,LYNCHING ,HOUSING discrimination ,HOMEOWNERS ,BLACK people ,RACIAL inequality - Abstract
Dissent from white ethnic hostility to blacks, as well as American segregation, was expressed in the pages of left-wing newspapers. Slovak Rovnosť ľudu and Polish Głos Ludowy ("People's Voice") demanded "nothing less than full freedom" for blacks, urging readers to embrace anti-lynching campaigns and the FEPC. Anti-integration housing riots were, to Głos Ludowy, manifestations of American fascism. The paper argued anti-black rioters were given "a skull-dugging support from certain sections of the Polish press." The Communist Slovak paper, Rovnosť ľudu ("People's Equality") likewise condemned white mobs attacking black war workers seeking to enter Detroit's Sojourner Truth Housing Project, and as early as 1937 letter writers to the paper "Condemned Prejudice Against Black Workers." The same year the paper denounced discriminatory lending practices at the Home Owners Loan Corporation, a prescient exposé of the racially skewed provision of social benefits. After the war both papers declared lynching of black veterans and racial segregation were American-style Hitlerism. Both papers' commitment to the wartime interracial Popular Front dissented from the more dominant embrace of whiteness. Głos Ludowy long continued its advocacy of racial equality. Extensive coverage was granted to civil-rights campaigns, while every white terrorist attack on activists was unequivocally denounced. The paper called the murder of Florida's NAACP leader "a shame and blot upon America" that had "the earmarks of genocide." "A burning concept of equality for the colored races" was articulated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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8. The Interface Between South Asian Culture and Palliative Care for Children, Young People, and Families-a Discussion Paper.
- Author
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Brown, Erica, Patel, Reena, Kaur, Jasveer, and Coad, Jane
- Subjects
- *
PALLIATIVE treatment , *MEDICAL care standards , *ASIANS , *BLACK people , *CINAHL database , *COMMUNICATION , *CULTURE , *HEALTH , *HEALTH services accessibility , *HEALTH status indicators , *HINDUISM , *ISLAM , *RELIGION & medicine , *MEDLINE , *MINORITIES , *PEDIATRICS , *INFORMATION resources , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *CULTURAL competence , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
A fundamental element of quality healthcare is that provision is accessible to all users and culturally sensitive to them. However, there is evidence to suggest that there is inequity of provision across all cultures. Furthermore, there is a paucity of published research in the United Kingdom concerning palliative care for minority ethnic families with a life-threatened or life-limited child or young person. The article sets out to discuss the findings of a literature review and, drawing on current work by the Centre for Children and Families Applied Research at Coventry University under the leadership of Professor Jane Coad, to explore the interface between South Asian cultures and the experience of palliative care services of children, young peoples, and families. All families require a broad range of services which are appropriately delivered and accessible throughout the trajectory of their child's illness. The literature review findings reveal that how families understand concepts such as health and disease arise from the complex interaction between personal experience and cultural lifestyle including language, family values, and faith. There is an urgent need to involve South Asian families in research in order to provide a robust evidence-base on which to develop service provision so that care is matched to the unique needs of individuals concerned. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Fragile equality: A Black paper's portrayal of race relations in late 19th century Cleveland.
- Author
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Jones Ross, Felecia G.
- Subjects
RACE discrimination ,BLACK people ,ETHNIC groups ,RACE relations ,SOCIAL problems - Abstract
The Cleveland Gazette was established in the midst of the major civil rights setbacks of the late 19th century. Although Cleveland, Ohio, provided a racially liberal climate, the Gazette revealed incidents of discrimination against Blacks and demanded that the incidents be corrected. As the Gazette reflected and commented on interracial behavior, it not only exemplified the Black press's role as a barometer for race relations, but also the importance of racial equality in a democratic society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
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10. Unlearning racism through transformative interracial dialogue.
- Author
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Stokke, Christian
- Subjects
RACISM ,INTERRACIAL couples ,BLACK people ,THEORY of knowledge ,EMOTIONS - Abstract
Presenting an empirical study of critical public pedagogy, this paper analyzes interracial dialogues on an internet forum run by conscious Black people who set the terms and challenge White participants who reflect a colorblind ideology. Drawing on Freire's education for critical consciousness and bell hooks' work on unlearning racism – understood as structural and interpersonal dominance relations – the paper shows how transformative interracial dialogues are possible despite difficulties. It proposes that epistemological change is required from White participants to cross the perception gap. Analysis of empirical examples shows how Blacks; who follow Patricia Hill Collins' Black feminist epistemology, and show emotions, speak from experience, and demand rhetoric to be translated into action; challenge White people's detached, Eurocentric perspectives, and dominating communicative behavior. Honest confrontation and critical dialogue lead several White participants to acknowledge their subjectivity, become aware of White privilege, and examine and change dominating communicative behavior towards Blacks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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11. Where the personal intersects with the political: I've Been Here All the While: Black Freedom on Native Land, by Alaina E. Roberts, Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2021. Cloth $34.95. Paper $24.95.
- Author
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Green, Hilary
- Subjects
- *
BLACK people , *COLLECTIVE memory , *ARCHIVES , *AFRICAN Americans , *RECONSTRUCTION (U.S. history, 1865-1877) , *AFRICAN American families , *AMERICAN Civil War, 1861-1865 - Abstract
"I've Been Here All the While: Black Freedom on Native Land" by Alaina E. Roberts explores the experiences of enslaved African Americans and freedpeople in modern-day Oklahoma. The author challenges the traditional narrative of settler colonialism, highlighting the role of Native American enslavers in the forced relocation of enslaved laborers from the southeastern United States. The book examines the complexities of race, citizenship, and belonging for Indian freedpeople in both tribal communities and the United States. Roberts also explores the impact of the Civil War, the Confederacy's alliance with the Five Nations, and the geopolitical tensions on the emancipation and rights of Indian freedpeople. The personal stories and family history woven into the narrative provide a unique perspective on finding belonging, freedom, and land in Indian Territory. The book contributes to the growing field of Civil War and Reconstruction Studies, emphasizing the importance of African American family history and collective remembrance in understanding marginalized histories. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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12. Within the Landscape: A Postcolonial Ecocritical Reading of Yvonne Vera's Butterfly Burning.
- Author
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Dlodlo, Buhlebenkosi
- Subjects
POSTCOLONIALISM ,BUTTERFLIES ,ANTHROPOCENTRISM ,BLACK people ,READING ,ECOCRITICISM ,CONSCIOUSNESS - Abstract
This paper problematizes the anthropocentrism that dominates critical responses to Yvonne Vera's Butterfly Burning (1998). It considers how Vera inscribes colonial issues within the landscape and emplaces nature in decolonial thought. Contrary to claims that most African writers have resisted the ecocritical paradigm, I argue that writers such as Vera exhibit an environmental consciousness. In my reading, I focalize the everyday experiences of ordinary people as they relate to nature in the wake of colonial modernity. While colonialism was dehumanizing to black people, Vera underscores the environmental injustice and capitalist phallocracy that undergirds it. The paper draws from and builds on the growing body of work on postcolonial ecocriticism, suggesting that postcolonial and ecocritical discourses can productively enrich each other in deconstructing toxic modernities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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13. An empirical assessment of writing and research proficiency in HBCU social work students.
- Author
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Jin, Seok Won, Warrener, Corinne, Alhassan, Mustapha, and Jones, Kenya C.
- Subjects
WRITING evaluation ,BLACK people ,PLAGIARISM ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SOCIAL work research ,SOCIAL work education ,SOCIAL workers ,STUDENTS ,SURVEYS ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,QUALITATIVE research ,PILOT projects ,HEALTH occupations school faculty ,MASTERS programs (Higher education) - Abstract
Lack of proficiency in writing and research among social work students has increasingly concerned social work educators and practitioners. Given the significance of written communication with clients and emphasis on evidence-based practice in the field of social work, it is critical to assess students’ competence in both writing and research. However, deficit-based approaches to assessing writing and research competence have disadvantaged students at historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs). This pilot study aims to assess writing and research proficiency of HBCU master’s of social work (MSW) students through empirical analysis of their capstone papers and surveys from educators to provide implications for developing a writing and research manual for social work programs at HBCUs. Ten capstone papers were randomly selected and qualitatively analyzed; nine faculty and one field supervisor completed the survey, and their respondents were analyzed using cross-case analysis. Analyses of the capstone papers identified two themes for writing and research domains, respectively: (1) weakness in developing statements and lack of knowledge of writing style and (2) plagiarism and lack of understanding of research structure. Moreover, analyses of the surveys revealed four themes regarding assessment of writing and research skills among students struggling with basic writing mechanics, indicating that HBCU MSW students may have potential and capacity for learning, as evidenced by their ideas and critical thinking skills. These findings suggest both teaching- and research-oriented programs could employ the proposed writing and research assessment manual, as well as a writing and research lab/center for improving writing and research skills among their students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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14. Elite schools and slavery in the UK – capital, violence and extractivism.
- Author
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Gamsu, Sol, Ashe, Stephen, and Arday, Jason
- Subjects
- *
ELITISM in education , *SLAVE trade , *SLAVERY , *SCHOOLBOYS , *BLACK people ,BRITISH colonies - Abstract
Elite schools in the UK are bound to the history of British colonialism. This paper examines the material ties between these schools and the transatlantic slave trade. We combine multiple sources to examine which schools and their alumni accrued substantial economic capital derived from the enslavement of Black people. We find two principal connections: first, in donations and foundations of schools from those who made their fortune in the slave trade; and second, through income of boys attending these schools. Drawing on the Legacies of British Slavery dataset, we show that schools with alumni benefitting from the slave trade include the most prestigious British private schools. Moreover, this paper traces the histories of several secondary schools founded by, or in receipt of, substantial donations from slave-owning families. We argue that extractive, violent forms of colonial capital accumulation have been central to, the formation and maintenance of these elite educational institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. What you should know about RACISM-20 in the U.S.: a fact sheet in the time of COVID-19.
- Author
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Petteway, Ryan J.
- Subjects
BLACK people ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,VIOLENCE ,PUBLIC health ,INSTITUTIONAL racism ,COVID-19 pandemic ,POLICE - Abstract
Drawing from social epidemiology literature on structural racism, and rooted in critical race theory and critical theory related to narrative power, this paper uses satire and humor as commentary on mainstream U.S. public health discourse related to the role of "race" (properly understood, racism) in shaping inequities observed via COVID-19. Taking the form of a "RACISM-20" fact sheet, this paper transposes structural racism and COVID-19. In doing so, it accentuates how individualist, ahistoric, and pathologizing "downstream" frames of health risks/solutions curtail productive dialogue and action to advance racial and health equity. In the spirit of "racial emancipatory humor", this work represents a potential pedagogical tool to discuss and critique dominant frames of racial(ized) risks, "vulnerability", and responsibility – both in the context of COVID-19 and within broader discourse of racial health inequities, including as related to racialized police violence. In this capacity, this "fact sheet" serves as an example health promotion product of critical resistance and counternarrative. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Local Netball Histories in Twentieth Century Cape Province, South Africa.
- Author
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Cleophas, Francois Johannes
- Subjects
NETBALL ,LOCAL history ,BLACK people ,SPORTS for girls ,SCHOOL sports - Abstract
This paper explores local history accounts of netball in South Africa's black communities from the second decade of the twentieth century until the 1960s. An attempt has been made to undo the notion that black people in South Africa do not have a netball history because of their absence in formal research. Therefore, at the core of this research is the creation of local narratives. These narratives highlight the names, results and the historical context that show how netball was part of the social fabric of society. After an introduction to the study, a motivation and methodology is laid out. A patchwork of netball histories in mission schools, prior to the Second World War, is then created and explored and used to create legacies. What follows is a social-historical accounts of netball at schools and colleges in Cape Town. The paper then concludes with discussion about why netball in South Africa's black communities is worthwhile recording, documenting and re-telling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The rhythm of place and the place of rhythm: arguments for idiorhythmy.
- Author
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Cresswell, Tim
- Subjects
RHYTHM ,RACE relations ,BLACK people ,ANTI-racism ,ARGUMENT - Abstract
This paper examines the relationship between rhythm, place, and race. It argues that Roland Barthes' concept of idiorhythmy is useful for understanding the politics of rhythm in relation to race. The paper explores how rhythm has been used to think about the interrelatedness of place and mobility – adding dynamism to place. I analyze reactions to the performance of Stravinsky's Le Sacre du Printemps to demonstrate how rhythm has been culturally and politically encoded through discursive and conceptual links to geographical imaginaries of place. The paper also explores how rhythm has been used to locate Black people in White western thought, and how it has been mobilized in Black and anti-racist thought. The concept of idiorhythmy is used to suggest the radical possibility of places of other rhythms, outside of the dominant rhythms of the world. Throughout the paper, it is argued that an understanding of rhythm is useful for delineating the interplay between place, race, and power. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. "Black Women Saved my Life": A Case Study on Healing Intersectional Racial Trauma.
- Author
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Hargons, Candice Nicole, Dogan-Dixon, Jardin, Malone, Natalie, and Sanchez, Anyoliny
- Subjects
TREATMENT of emotional trauma ,RACISM ,BLACK people ,EMOTIONAL trauma ,MENTAL health ,SOCIAL justice ,POST-traumatic stress disorder ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,INTERSECTIONALITY ,EMOTIONS ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,MENTAL health services - Abstract
The painful consequences of intersectional racial trauma on the mental health of Black women have been examined in the existing literature. However, limited research explicates how to assess, conceptualize, and treat intersectional racial trauma in clinical practice. Practicing psychologists seeking to integrate science and practice for mental health and social justice breakthroughs desire innovative clinical models to facilitate this work. This paper presents a case study of a week-long, intensive teletherapy retreat to treat the intersectional racial trauma of a queer, middle-aged, Black cisgender woman. We detail theories and research regarding racial trauma and intersectionality and present the integrated How to Love a Human model. Then, we describe the client's presenting concerns and how to assess and conceptualize intersectional racial trauma to inform a multifaceted, collectivistic treatment approach. Last, we chronologically overview each day of the retreat and address how our healing approach can serve as a research framework and clinical example to treat intersectional racial trauma among Black women. Racial trauma is a painful reality for many Black women, with other intersecting forms of oppression exacerbating the impact. This paper describes how four Black women provided therapy through an innovative, collectivist model for a queer Black woman experiencing intersectional racial trauma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Disrupting unlawful exclusion from school of minoritised children and young people racialized as Black: using Critical Race Theory composite counter-storytelling.
- Author
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Bei, Zahra and Knowler, Helen
- Subjects
RACISM ,MINORITIES ,BLACK people ,SCHOOL discipline ,PROFESSIONAL employee training ,SOCIAL justice ,CRITICAL race theory ,METROPOLITAN areas ,STORYTELLING - Abstract
Utilising Critical Race Theory (CRT) as the analytical lens and CRT composite counter-storytelling as the method, this paper seeks to illuminate the experiences of minoritised children and young people racialised as Black in relation to encounters with the exclusionary practice called 'off-rolling'. We conceptualise off-rolling as a hidden process of exclusion in education, and the stories shared in this paper bring into sharp focus the educational, relational and emotional impacts of camouflaged exclusionary practices. We offer four composite stories of exclusion to demonstrate how some of the most vulnerable, excluded, and marginalised young Black people from English urban cities experience further marginalisation because off-rolling, we argue, places learners in a space (both physically and educationally) located beyond care and inclusion. Storytelling is mobilised as a central method in CRT for challenging and exposing exclusionary practices, as it foregrounds the knowledge and lived experience of people of colour and we explore the processes of constructing such counter-stories. As an encouragement to reflection and critical conversation about unlawful exclusion and racial disparities, this paper was written with three goals in mind. The first is that it may inspire educators of colour to tell counter-stories that name their own reality and experiences of exclusion. Second, that in reading and responding to counter-stories, white educators will be encouraged to develop their own racial literacy. Finally, the third goal is that the call to action is answered from within and beyond the confines of academia, where inclusion and racial justice in education can no longer be left to wait. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Marshall Plan or neocolonization? The Model Cities Program and Black planning criticism.
- Author
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Wolin, Jeremy Lee
- Subjects
- *
URBAN renewal , *BLACK people , *AFRICAN American history , *AFRICAN Americans , *BLACK activists , *DIPLOMATIC history , *POLITICAL participation , *PUBLIC demonstrations - Abstract
This paper analyses the writing of Black activists, planners, and critics to reconcile two opposing perceptions of the Model Cities Program: an initiative known for its elevation of Black elected officials and a program that used the guise of citizen participation to stifle more radical forms of dissent. In 1966, Model Cities emerged in part from the call for a domestic Marshall Plan for Black Americans. Yet as the program began making incremental changes to the country's neighbourhoods from 1967 to the early 1970s, participants and critics instead began to see Model Cities' relationship to Black Americans as a new form of colonialism. To determine how this shift occurred, this paper analyses this critical commentary against the archival evidence of Model Cities implementation in the cities in which it appeared. Situating these authors' arguments within the parallel emergence of Black studies and participatory planning as well as within larger Cold War diplomatic history, planning history, and African American intellectual history reveals how visions of revolution turned into a program of representation. Meanwhile, the plans these figures produced as part of Model Cities point to what a revolutionary program might yet be. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Racism and Other Traumatic Inequalities: Editors' Introduction.
- Author
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Corpt, Elizabeth and Richard, Annette
- Subjects
RACISM ,PSYCHOANALYSTS ,ABORIGINAL Canadians ,BLACK people ,DISABILITY rights movement ,GAY men ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) - Abstract
Constance Dunlap, in a powerful recitative to Dennis's paper titled I A Renewed Appeal for Vigorous and Positive Action i , adroitly identifies the key points in Kleinian theory which support the theoretical foundation of Dennis's argument. It is from this vastly different perspective that Sperry considers Dennis' treatment of Mrs A. From this viewpoint, she offers an alternative interpretation of Mrs A's choice of a Black analyst. While acknowledging the usefulness of Dennis's use of the Kleinian lens, he raises the question as to whether Kleinian theory can adequately address the desire to care and be cared for. Why would we, at Psychoanalysis, Self and Context, choose to feature and build an issue around an article submitted by a Black Kleinian analyst?. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
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22. Black Women as Genres of Skin: A Necropolitical Analysis of US Open Representational Texts of Serena Williams and Naomi Osaka.
- Author
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Kaufulu, Mphatso Moses
- Subjects
RACISM ,PRACTICAL politics ,BLACK people ,FEMININITY ,WOMEN ,CULTURAL pluralism ,EXPERIENCE ,SEX distribution ,TENNIS ,TEXT messages - Abstract
This paper draws from necropolitics to apply an intertextual analysis of representational texts in order to foreground the constitutive role of race and gender in the construction of media texts. This construction is referred to in this paper as a meta-text which obtains from socio-cultural classifications which mark some groups as 'people' and others as 'unpeople', and thus, some groups as possessing 'internal lives' and others as only existing as 'surfaces'. Out of these grand, racing distinctions emanate the additional layers of gendered femininity, which is marked as white, and de-gendered 'non-femininity' which is Black. These meta-texts constitute the building blocks for the construction of meanings which then become representation as understood within textual analysis. The Osaka and Williams final in 2018 provides a highly illuminating instance in which these necropolitical processes occur, even as the paper attempts to demonstrate how African postcolonial [necropolitical] theory and critical cultural analysis complement in textual analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Covering and Uncovering Race: A Discussion of "Racial Difference, Rupture, and Repair: A View from the Couch and Back".
- Author
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Straker, Gillian
- Subjects
RACE relations ,AFRICAN Americans ,BLACK people ,RACIAL inequality - Abstract
The paper discusses clinical issues raised by three Black patient/trainee/therapists (this issue) concerning working with three White therapists at moments of race inflected ruptures followed by repair. It asks questions pertaining to race relations in the consulting room and beyond given that in South Africa unlike in North America Black people are in political power and are a numerical majority albeit that like Black Americans they have inherited gross socio-economic inequality and have suffered institutional violence and discrimination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A systematic review of religion and dementia care pathways in black and minority ethnic populations.
- Author
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Regan, JemmaL., Bhattacharyya, Sarmishtha, Kevern, Peter, and Rana, Tanvir
- Subjects
BLACK people ,DEMENTIA ,ETHNIC groups ,HELP-seeking behavior ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,MEDLINE ,PATIENT satisfaction ,PSYCHOLOGY & religion ,SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
Objective: To investigate how religion influences care pathways for black and minority ethnic individuals with dementia. We conducted a systematic search of the literature to explore how religion affects later presentation to care services, absence of care-seeking and dissatisfaction with care. Exclusion and Inclusion criteria were applied to the research literature. Qualitative and quantitative papers were included. Included studies were assessed independently by four authors according to quality criteria. Two US studies adhered to the final screening stage. Findings from these papers postulated that religion influences care in two polarised ways: (1) Religion hinders access to the traditional health care pathway. (2) Religion assists in positive coping. Collaboration between religious institutions and health care providers is required to improve care referral, provide information dissemination and relieve care-giver burden. UK research in this area is necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Knitting as a Way of Honoring Black Ancestry and Creating Storytelling Through Community, Belonging, and the Reframing of Grief: A Womanist Perspective (Le tricot comme moyen d'honorer l'héritage noir et de créer la narration à travers la communauté, l'appartenance et le recadrage du deuil : une perspective féministe noire)
- Author
-
Taylor-Johnson, Hannah
- Subjects
CULTURE ,GRIEF ,BLACK people ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,ART therapy ,HANDICRAFT ,STORYTELLING ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Art Therapy is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. How to become an antiracist newspaper in the 1890s Black Atlantic: The ethical imperative of recirculation in Celestine Edwards's Fraternity.
- Author
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Bilbija, Marina
- Subjects
ANTI-racism ,BRITISH colonies ,GREEK letter societies ,NEWSPAPERS ,AFRICAN Americans ,BROTHERLINESS ,BLACK people - Abstract
This essay examines the print strategies of Britain's first Black editor, S. J. Celestine Edwards (1857?–1894), during his tenure at the antiracist journal, Fraternity. I show how Edwards capitalized on "scissors-and-paste" methods to articulate connections between minoritizing processes in British colonies and the US, thus formulating a theory of Anglo-Saxonism as a power relation reproduced across empires. Via the pages of Fraternity, Edwards reassembled this inter-imperial formation as an antiracist one, relying on reprints from the African American and British colonial press. Building on Caroline Bressey, I argue that Edwards extended the journal's function as a "relay station" for the colonial and African American press to his readers, whom he charged with memorizing and ventriloquizing Fraternity, and hailed as walking, talking issues of his paper. His directives to recirculate already reprinted texts inducted readers into an imagined community whose membership refracted across multiple publications rather than centered on one. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Decolonial love as a pedagogy of care for Black immigrant post-secondary students.
- Author
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Butler, Alana
- Subjects
- *
DECOLONIZATION , *IMMIGRANTS , *RADICALISM , *BLACK people , *STUDENTS - Abstract
This paper explores 'decolonial love' as a pedagogy of care among 16 first generation Black immigrants enrolled in predominantly White four- year colleges in the United States and Canada. The term 'decolonial love' and extensions of this original conceptualization focus on radical self-love and resistance to colonial oppression. Scholars have also connected decolonial love with Black liberation movements. Through a narrative analysis of the Black immigrant student experiences in university, this article uses a decolonial and intersectional approach to explore how higher educational institutions can embrace a radical decolonial praxis. This approach affirms and supports Black identities in a climate of anti-Black racism. The paper will discuss implications for institutions and educators whose aim it is to decolonize their teaching practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Beyond the premise of conquest: Indigenous and Black earth-worlds in the Anthropocene debates.
- Author
-
Gill, Bikrum
- Subjects
CHRONOBIOLOGY ,GEOLOGICAL time scales ,BLACK people ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,SPACETIME - Abstract
This paper interrogates how the two major competing frameworks in the debates over framing our geological epoch – the Anthropocene and the Capitalocene – are unified in the reproduction of a Eurocentric assumption that functions to confirm the historical priority of Euro-Western geological agency, the corollary of which is the rendering derivative of non-European peoples as lacking in such capacity until mobilized by Euro-Western forces. Rather than assume that humanity in general, or colonial capitalism more specifically, has generated a novel geological epoch by disrupting the 'natural' temporal divide between deep geological time, medium run biological time, and human history, this paper argues for a more co-constitutive relation between geological, biological, and social space-times. Locating ourselves within an irreducible socio-bio-geological space-time, we re-encounter the earth as multiple earth-worldings co-constituted by Indigenous and Black peoples in ways that precede, and exceed, the hitherto understood to be 'originary' geological capacity of Euro-Western colonial capitalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Angry Gymnastics: Representations of Simone Biles at the 2019 National and World Championships.
- Author
-
Velloso, Carolina
- Subjects
RACISM ,SEXISM ,MASS media ,PRESS ,FEMINISM ,BLACK people ,PREJUDICES ,STEREOTYPES ,GYMNASTICS ,SPORTS events - Abstract
This paper analyzes representations of Simone Biles in media coverage of two major gymnastics events in 2019. It asks which, if any, gendered and racial stereotypes identified in previous scholarship about media coverage of Black and women athletes are also present in coverage of Biles. It also interrogates in what ways these stereotypes intersect as distinct forms of representation of Biles as a Black woman. Employing the tenets of feminist theory and Black feminist thought through an intersectional lens, a qualitative textual analysis of 34 articles revealed that both gendered and racial stereotypes were present in coverage of Biles. The most prominent stereotypes include feminized emotions, lack of mental fortitude, negative attitudes, and physicality. These intersecting representations underscore the persistence of these stereotypes in contemporary discourse. This paper contributes to, and advances, the literature on media representations of women athletes, Black athletes, and Black women athletes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The Racialized American Dream: Predictors for the 21st Century.
- Author
-
Torkelson, Jason, Parton, Alex, Gerteis, Joseph, and Gunderson, Evan
- Subjects
- *
RACISM , *PEOPLE of color , *SOCIAL integration , *RACE , *BLACK people , *RACIAL & ethnic attitudes , *AMERICAN Dream - Abstract
The American Dream has long been understood as a “shorthand summary of a nation’s collective aspirations” (Hauhart 2015:65). What determines optimism about the Dream? This paper uses nationally representative data collected at a critical historical juncture to advance research which has connected the American Dream to America’s racial history. We find faith in the American Dream was racialized into the 21st-Century, both in the sense that our data show different levels of optimism toward the Dream by race and in that predictors of belief vary by racialized experiences and ideologies. We find that most Americans continued to believe in the American Dream, but contrary to prominent 20th-Century understandings, whites became less optimistic than persons of color, and that this remaining white belief was complex, with racial attitudes being central. Predictors of belief in the Dream were different by race in ways that may vitally reflect how collective aspirations are conceived from within unfolding American racial civic histories and 21st-Century racial hierarchies, patterns we discuss as privileged multiculturalism (whites), meritocratic incorporation (Hispanics), and positive social inclusion (Blacks). Ultimately, these findings suggest that the socio-cultural significance of the American Dream is not just tied to material position but intertwined with racialized cultural expectations, outlooks, and status concerns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Editorial.
- Author
-
Bryan, Agnes and Ruch, Gillian
- Subjects
BLACK people ,LEADERSHIP ,MANAGEMENT ,PUBLIC welfare ,SERIAL publications ,SOCIAL case work ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,CLINICAL supervision - Abstract
The article discusses various papers published in this issue including one by Angela Foster on managerialism and leadership, one by Wendy Lobatto on the dynamics of leadership and one by Frank Lowe on psychoanalytic frameworks to explain the glass ceiling encounteres by black managers and leaders.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The Flourishing of the UK African and Caribbean Diaspora in the Twenty-First Century with Reference to Jeremiah's Letter to Jewish Exiles in Babylon Sixth-Century BCE.
- Author
-
Aldred, Joe
- Subjects
DIASPORA ,EXILES ,AUTONOMY (Psychology) ,BLACK people ,BLACK theology - Abstract
This paper is an attempt to explore how the UK African and Caribbean Diaspora might flourish by focusing more on self-agency. Drawing upon Black Pentecostal and Black theological concepts, the paper highlights, exilic identity, settlement and growth, welfare and prayer and prophetic truth as fecund with ideas towards Black self-determination in the diaspora. These are drawn from Old Testament prophet Jeremiah's letter to Jewish exiles in Babylon in sixth-century BCE that suggests a framework for flourishing and resisting empire. This is a quasi-autobiographical approach that utilises the writer's experience and research as a Black Pentecostal and ecumenist, Black theologian, and a member of the UK African and Caribbean Diaspora for over five decades. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Through a white lens: Black victimhood, visibility, and whiteness in the Black Lives Matter movement on TikTok.
- Author
-
Eriksson Krutrök, Moa and Åkerlund, Mathilda
- Subjects
BLACK Lives Matter movement ,VISIBILITY ,BLACK people ,CRITICAL discourse analysis ,POLICE brutality ,BLACK children - Abstract
In this paper, we explore how highly visible users in the context of #BlackLivesMatter on TikTok shape the narrative around Black victims of police brutality, the understanding of these narratives by others, and the potential consequences of these portrayals for the movement at large. To examine these dimensions, we analysed the 100 most circulated TikTok videos and associated comments depicting victims of police brutality using the #BlackLivesMatter hashtag through multimodal critical discourse analysis. We identified how users attempted to increase visibility of their content, and how this was supported or criticised by commenters depending on the perceived motives of these efforts. Furthermore, we showcased how influencers raised awareness of the movement with little personal effort or risk, sometimes appearing to leverage the movement for self-exposure. Our analysis showed that many of the most liked videos were made by white content creators who, in their videos, seemed to be addressing an imagined white audience. While these efforts portrayed the movement favourably, the content creators remain outsiders who have not themselves been in harm's way of police brutality. While there were exceptions that promoted the perspectives of marginalised communities, and while the white narratives were consistently supportive of the movement, they also work to displace focus on racial (in)justice away from those directly affected by it, that is, away from Black people's own experiences of police brutality. We discuss these findings in relation to questions about digital representations of Black victimhood, digital visibility and practices of whiteness, on TikTok and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Raising Black Daughters: Using Intersectionality and Memorable Messages to Understand Parental Gendered Racial Socialization.
- Author
-
Minniear, Mackensie J., Pierce, Timothy, and Morrison, Jadah
- Subjects
SOCIALIZATION ,RACISM ,PSYCHOLOGY of parents ,SCHOLARLY method ,BLACK people ,DAUGHTERS ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,INTERSECTIONALITY ,COMMUNICATION ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,HEALTH equity ,MEDICAL research - Abstract
Black women face differences in treatment based on their gender and racial identity. Therefore, scholarship has increased in understanding gendered racial socialization. This paper explains how parents negotiate their memorable messages about Black womanhood with the messages they want their Black daughters to receive. We used the subreddit/r/Blackparents to answer our research questions. Our findings showed the prevalence of memorable messages regarding hair and representational intersectionality. Additionally, we found how parents use their memorable messages to provide advice for anticipatory socialization. We explore how these results allow us to extend theorizing on memorable messages, and supplement work on gendered racial socialization. Results demonstrate the political power of Black parenthood, as well as showcase the dynamic nature of memorable messages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Anti-racist research practice partnerships as critical education: dismantling the master's house with their own tools?
- Author
-
Smith, Richard J, Wilson, Camille, Fraser, Paulina, O'Connell Hanna, Margaret, and Larsosa, Jasahn
- Subjects
SCHOOL environment ,DIVERSITY & inclusion policies ,SELF advocacy ,SOCIAL norms ,BLACK people ,FEMINISM ,LEADERSHIP ,INTERGENERATIONAL relations ,SOCIAL justice ,THEORY of knowledge ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,SELF-efficacy ,RESEARCH funding ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,COALITIONS ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,THEMATIC analysis ,INTENTION ,METROPOLITAN areas ,SOCIAL case work ,GROUP dynamics ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) - Abstract
This paper reflects upon "Justice Now Coalition" (JNC), an anti-racist research practice partnership (RPP). The Coalition drew from the Black Emancipatory Action Research (BEAR) Framework as well as Black feminist, Afro-futurist, and critical race epistemologies to answer two research questions: 1) How can an urban education RPP that includes academic, community, and youth partners engage in a collaborative inquiry process that helps to dismantle the STPP/Nexus; and 2) How does engagement in the collaborative inquiry process influence research projects, group dynamics, and community members? We present a self-reflective, ethnographic case study of an anti-racist RPP that we led. We find that the collaborative inquiry teams' primary way to dismantle the STPP/Nexus is to center Black children. They approached their work not from a policy change perspective, but in the co-creation of a space where Black youth speak, are heard, and take the agency to reimagine and reconstruct their school environment. Data also show the leadership of Black women who collaborated with partners with the intentionality of demonstrating love and critical care for Black communities. This work extends the vision of RPPs to be explicitly anti-racist and decolonizing by engaging in an Afro-futurist space in the present. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Attachment perspectives on race, prejudice, and anti-racism: Introduction to the Special Issue.
- Author
-
Stern, Jessica A., Barbarin, Oscar, and Cassidy, Jude
- Subjects
BLACK people ,SERIAL publications ,RACE ,PREJUDICES ,ATTACHMENT behavior ,INSTITUTIONAL racism ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,AFRICAN Americans - Abstract
Central to attachment theory is the idea that behavior in close relationships can best be understood in context. Although decades of research have illuminated cross-cultural patterns of caregiving and attachment, there remains a critical need to increase research with African American families, examine the specific sociocultural context of systemic anti-Black racism, and integrate the rich theory and research of Black scholars. The goal of this special issue is to bring together attachment researchers and scholars studying Black youth and families to leverage and extend attachment-related work to advance anti-racist perspectives in developmental science. The papers in this special issue, highlighted in the introduction, illuminate pathways of risk and resilience in Black children, adolescents, and families and point to the protective power of relationships (and the limits of such protection) for mental and physical health. We highlight critical questions to guide ongoing dialogue and collaboration on this important topic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Standing at the Water's Edge: Manymothers in African American Culture.
- Author
-
Bryant, Valerie
- Subjects
AFRICAN Americans ,SMART structures ,BLACK people ,CULTURE ,EDGES (Geometry) - Abstract
This paper aims to initiate a discourse that connects allomothers, endemic to African culture, with collective manymothering attachments from a psychoanalytic perspective. This paper illuminates the process by which, beginning with West Africa, Black mothers adapted and carried the process of mothering with them to provide consistent nurturing, responsiveness, and attunement to their infants' and children's needs. This process of extending caregiving responsibilities to the community at large, which I have labeled manymothering, has created generations of resistance and resilience that have supported Black people to the present. The psychoanalytic lens of othermothers serves as an adaptive familial structure that has been sustained through intergenerational resilient transmission. The linkage between culture and spirituality as a means of ameliorating trauma and promoting resilience was examined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Interanimating Black sexualities and the geography classroom.
- Author
-
Eaves, LaToya E.
- Subjects
BLACK people ,HUMAN sexuality ,IMPERIALISM ,GENDER identity ,GEOGRAPHY education in universities & colleges ,SOCIAL order - Abstract
Why teach Black sexualities? How might Black lived sexualities provide students a more nuanced understanding of geography and place-making practices? The junctions of Blackness, sexuality, and place are understood as active processes that are being shaped and formed by and through power relations. This paper argues for centralizing the mutually constitutive nature of sexualities and Blackness, by troubling the normative notions of sexualities as commonly approached in curriculum and pedagogy. Focusing on Black sexualities is imperative, as Black lives, politics, and locations permeate the social order and can make visible the ways in which colonial legacies imbue global structures of dismissal, displacement, and erasure. Black sexualities are always personal and political, intermediating between systemic axes of oppression grounded in colonialism and imperialism and the agency of Black sex and sexual identities in spite of pathologizing structural components of society and space. As such, this paper considers the opportunities that Black sexualities offer in teaching and learning in the geography classroom. I consider the role of curricular choices, course discussions and assignments, and the pedagogy of embodiment. Embedded in a Black Geographies framework, I argue that centering a Black sense of place is essential to pedagogies of Black sexualities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Money, museums, and memory: cultural patronage by black voluntary associations.
- Author
-
Banks, Patricia A.
- Subjects
MUSEUM contributions ,ENDOWMENTS ,AFRICAN American associations ,MIDDLE class ,BLACK people ,COLLECTIVE memory ,MUSEUM benefactors - Abstract
While the middle- and upper-class is typically cast as using museum patronage to support narratives that reinforce the position of dominant racial groups, this paper presents an alternative perspective. Drawing on ethnographic and archival data, I conceptually and empirically elaborate how gifts by black middle- and upper-class voluntary organizations to African American museums are enabled by racial uplift ideology and directed at nurturing counter-narratives about African Americans. As patrons of memory they aim to reconstitute recollections of African Americans by challenging master narratives of national life where they are either absent or marginalized. Gifts to black museums also support the inclusion of their own organizations and members as protagonists in this counter-memory. By turning attention to cultural patronage among black middle- and upper-class voluntary organizations, this paper demonstrates how museum patronage among elites can unsettle, rather than reinforce, master racial narratives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. THE BLACK SCHOLAR BOOKS RECEIVED.
- Author
-
Spencer, Camille
- Subjects
SCHOLARLY publishing ,BLACK people ,BIBLIOGRAPHY - Abstract
The article presents a bibliography of books on blacks including "The New Blacks," by Ray Boone; "In Times Like These," by Zee Edgell; and "South Africa's Economic Crisis," by Stephen Gelb.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Is spatial mismatch really spatial, and really a mismatch? Recent evidence on employment among Hispanic and Black people in the U.S.
- Author
-
Paul, Julene and Morris, Eric A.
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT ,BLACK people ,SUBURBANIZATION ,SPATIAL mismatch hypothesis ,WAGES - Abstract
In 1968, John Kain hypothesized that Black residential suburbanization had not accompanied suburbanizing jobs, leading to poor employment outcomes for young Black men. This paper reinvestigates spatial mismatch in the 2000s and 2010s, focusing on differences between urban and suburban White, Black, and Hispanic residents of the U.S. We find some evidence for spatial mismatch when pooling data across all years, and stronger evidence for mismatch among Black people than among Hispanic people. First, both urban Black and Hispanic people earn lower wages than equivalent suburbanites, all else equal. Second, urban Black people have a higher probability of un- and under-employment relative to their suburban counterparts. Third, Black and Hispanic people have longer commutes than equivalent Whites do, but suburban residence mitigates this effect. Yet we also find evidence that in recent years, spatial mismatch may not be as serious a problem as many people believe. For example, the wage premium for suburban people—White, Black, and Hispanic—has fallen. Further, urban Hispanic people are not more likely to be unemployed than equivalent suburbanites. Finally, urban and suburban Black and Hispanic people do not work in different types of occupations, so location is not associated with suburbanites of color holding more or less "desirable" jobs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. "Come and get your soul food": a duo-ethnographic account of black teachers modeling the praxis of the black intellectual tradition.
- Author
-
Acosta, Melanie M. and Hayes, Cleveland
- Subjects
BLACK teachers ,BLACK people ,RACISM ,SOCIAL movements ,SCHOOL discipline - Abstract
In this paper, we contribute to the work in progress which outlines the contours of the praxis of Black intellectual traditions by illuminating the ways in which the pedagogy of Black teachers can serve as a model useful for the preparation of preservice and inservice teachers. Researchers have documented that the successful Black educators employ practices derived from critical perspectives that serve as the conduit for their instruction and interactions in schools. Through two different studies of Black teacher pedagogy, we position the work of Black teachers as a timely pedagogical intervention into anti-Black teaching and learning structures in k-12 education and teacher education that challenge the cultivation and enactments of liberatory visions of teaching and learning for Black children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Exploring How the Terms "Black" and "African American" May Shape Health Communication Research.
- Author
-
Ridley-Merriweather, Katherine E., Hoffmann-Longtin, Krista, and Owusu, Raiven K.
- Subjects
HUMAN research subjects ,BLACK people ,PATIENT selection ,RACE ,MEDICAL care research ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,COMMUNICATION ,TERMS & phrases ,HEALTH equity ,AFRICAN Americans - Abstract
Several distinct terms are used to identify descendants of the African diaspora (DADs) as fellow members of a racialized population. However, "Black" and "African American" are the two labels most commonly used. Given the recent calls for examining institutionalized racism in the United States, health scholars must contemplate the problems that may arise when these two terms are used interchangeably, namely the extent to which mislabeling may reify already significant health disparities. This essay examines the histories and meanings of "Black" and "African American" as identity labels and explores their importance in relationship to the effective recruitment of DADs to health research and clinical trials. In this paper, we employ the communication theory of identity and critical race theory as lenses to call attention to the discursive challenges associated with recruitment of DADs in health research. We also encourage health communication scholars to explore and extend the scope of this research. We do this by first describing the unintended consequences in health research through disregard of DADs' chosen identity labels. We then use the various terms to describe DADs to illuminate existing tensions between "Black" and "African American." We describe how each moniker is used and perceived, broadly and in health contexts. Finally, we call for more research into the effects of mislabeling and propose a plan for researchers' next steps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Black/White disparities in low birth weight pregnancy outcomes: an exploration of differences in health factors within a vulnerable population.
- Author
-
Clay, Shondra Loggins
- Subjects
MATERNAL health services ,HEALTH services accessibility ,BLACK people ,RACE ,FISHER exact test ,LOW birth weight ,PREGNANCY outcomes ,INCOME ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,WHITE people ,HEALTH equity ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DATA analysis software ,MARITAL status ,SECONDARY analysis ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to (1) determine if there are racial differences between Non-Hispanic (NH) Black and NH White women in health 'care' factors associated with low birth weight (LBW), (2) to determine if there are differences across health 'system' factors, and (3) to explore if the factors account for racial differences. Univariate and multinomial nested logit (MNL) models were performed. Whereas the LBW percentage for NH White women was 8.1%, for NH Black women, the LBW percentage was 13.6% (p <.001). NH Black women were significantly more likely to be unmarried (p <.001) and earn less income (p <.001). For level of care, NH Black women were more likely to have LBW babies in neonatal care; whereas NH White women were more likely to have LBW babies in well-baby nurseries. Results from MNL models indicated that NH Black women were 1.79 times more likely to have a LBW baby. When controlling for health 'care' factors, the racial difference between NH Black and NH White women in the likelihood of having a LBW baby increased to an odds ratio of 2.26 (p =.038). There are racial differences in factors associated with LBW. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. An 'anchor baby' yearns for a feminist of colour and decolonial sex education.
- Author
-
Parra, Michelle Gomez
- Subjects
RACISM ,LEGISLATION ,FEMINISM ,HUMAN sexuality ,BLACK people ,CURRICULUM ,SEX education - Abstract
Sex and sexuality curricula in the USA should acknowledge the structural conditions racialised young people navigate to make sense of their sexual experiences and more explicitly recognise the political power of gender and sexuality. This paper suggests educators use women of colour feminism and decolonial studies to offer a historicised approach to understanding and engaging with gender and sexuality. Such an approach acknowledges how European colonisation has constructed white middle-class masculinity, femininity and heterosexuality as normative and pathologises other forms of gender and sexuality expression. It encourages educators to address state investment in colonial hierarchies by foregrounding how national legislation and associated discourses support the institutionalised pathologisation of racialised sexuality. Using a feminist of colour and decolonial approach, the article examines how US national policy further disciplines racialised sexuality by employing discourses of 'anchor babies' to justify the passing of new laws. It draws on the author's experience as an educator of colour to show how historicising gender and sexuality can teach racialised students there is nothing pathological about their sexuality. A transformed sex and sexuality curriculum is proposed to teach students about the political power they wield, and what critical understanding and action they can achieve. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Can anti-racism training improve outgroup liking and allyship behaviours?
- Author
-
Williams, Monnica T. and Gran-Ruaz, Sophia M.
- Subjects
ANTI-racism ,MICROAGGRESSIONS ,PEOPLE of color ,MENTAL health ,OUTGROUPS (Social groups) ,BLACK people - Abstract
Allies are members of a dominant group that work to dismantle oppression experienced by subordinate groups. Given the well-documented mental health impact of all forms of racism on people of colour, including microaggressions, cultivating White allies is important for reducing racism and advancing equity. This paper examines the impact of two diversity workshops on White college students, examining allophilia (anti-prejudiced feelings) and interpersonal allyship towards Black people both before and after the workshops and at one-month follow-up. We examined what aspects of liking improved after each worksop by assessing changes in each of the five components of allophilia (Affection, Comfort, Kinship, Engagement, and Enthusiasm), and if either workshop was able to precipitate increased racial allyship. Significant changes were found by condition, immediately, post-workshop, and at follow-up. Increases in allyship were predicted by increases in allophilia, specifically Enthusiasm. Implications of findings and suggestions for improving future anti-racism interventions are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Who's black and why? A hidden chapter from the eighteenth-century invention of race: Who's Black and Why? A Hidden Chapter from the Eighteenth-Century Invention of Race, by Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and Andrew S. Curran, Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England, Harvard University Press, 2022, 303 pages. 29,95$. ISBN: 9780674244269
- Author
-
Sabbagh, Gabriel
- Subjects
- *
BLACK people , *RACISM - Abstract
This paper is prompted by the publication of a book by Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and Andrew S. Curran on the contest launched in 1739 by the Bordeaux Academy on the origin of black skin and hair. The most influential work submitted as part of this contest was an essay by Pierre Barrère. This paper has two parts, one devoted to a review of the book, the other to the discovery of a cogent text, which was certainly written by a member of the Lyon Academy, Guillaume Rey. Rey criticized Barrère's essay and debunked various beliefs about the origin of black skin that were commonly held at the time of its publication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The "Great Awokening": Racial narratives in reporting on the working class in White leftist and Black newspapers during the 2016 United States presidential election.
- Author
-
Thornton, Michael C. and Tischauser, Jeff
- Subjects
WORKING class white people ,UNITED States presidential elections ,BLACK people ,UNITED States presidential election, 2016 ,BLACK voters ,INSTITUTIONAL racism ,WORKING class - Abstract
Recent events in the United States galvanized by race have purportedly had a significant effect on the wider society's appreciation of systemic racism, some calling this the "Great Awokening." Some social commentators assert that it is now the norm for "leftists" to reveal "not a strain of racism," while others argue that they are now farther left than average Black voters. We critique this assertion of a new metamorphosis among White people by exploring how White leftist print media contrasts with Black newspaper reporting on the shape of working class people during the 2016 United States presidential race. Using textual analysis, we examined articles culled from Ethnic NewsWatch (424 articles) and the Alternative Press Index (303) and found two fundamentally divergent patterns about race's role. We found that the left-wing White press used a color-blind rhetoric to narrate stories about a racially homogenized working class, a distinctly downtrodden sector of America oppressed by elites. In utilizing a color-blind frame, the reporting failed to confront how systemic racism was a fundamental context to understanding the election. In contrast, Black newspapers described a working class world that was multiracial and actively resistant to structures of oppression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. African American Academic Librarians: An Evidence Map Case Study Using Rapid Review Methodology.
- Author
-
Jefferson, Jasmine L. and Fehrmann, Paul
- Subjects
ACADEMIC libraries ,BLACK people ,DATABASE searching ,DATABASES ,EMPLOYMENT discrimination ,EMPLOYEE recruitment ,LIBRARIANS ,CASE studies ,MENTORING ,RACISM ,SERIAL publications ,VOCATIONAL guidance ,EMPLOYEE retention ,LITERATURE reviews - Abstract
This article explores rapid review and evidence mapping methodology to map library literature on the presence of, status of, or support for African American academic librarians. Rapid reviews include transparent steps and are completed in a short time frame. Evidence mapping is emerging as a way to summarize evidence. A chronological map indicated topics and impacts of papers. Additional analysis also showed four broad themes: diversity, recruitment, retention, and racism. In our view, rapid review and evidence mapping methods should be considered by academic librarians. Further research should look at racism that still seems apparent in academic libraries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Race Films and the Black Press: Representation and Resistance.
- Author
-
Velloso, Carolina
- Subjects
RACE ,AFRICAN American artists ,BLACK films ,BLACK people ,FILM studies ,PRESS ,AFRICAN American literature - Abstract
Beginning with the release of The Birth of a Nation through the mid-twentieth century, the film industry began featuring African Americans on the silver screen. The emergence of race films—major film productions made by African Americans and featuring Black artists—were frequently reported and reviewed in the Black press. This examination of the coverage of race films in three major Black newspapers, the Chicago Defender, Pittsburgh Courier, and Baltimore Afro-American, traces coverage of race films by the Black press between 1915 and 1950. This study builds on literature from journalism and communication studies, as well as film studies to illustrate how the Black press fulfilled its role as an advocacy press and served its mission of racial uplift through its race film coverage. It argues that Black newspapers achieved this by giving positive coverage to race films, their actors, producers, and crew members, and by unreservedly criticizing Black members of the entertainment industry if the Black press perceived that they were acting in ways detrimental to the greater cause of improving attitudes toward the Black community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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