scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

sister citizen: shame, stereotypes, and black women in America

Toni Pressley-Sanon
- 01 Mar 2013 - 
- Vol. 103, Iss: 1
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, it is possible to locate as well as download sister citizen shame stereotypes and black women in america Book and find Jean Campbell eBook in layout and also have a fantastic collection of information connected to this Digitalbook for you.
Abstract
Are you looking to uncover sister citizen shame stereotypes and black women in america Digitalbook. Correct here it is possible to locate as well as download sister citizen shame stereotypes and black women in america Book. We've got ebooks for every single topic sister citizen shame stereotypes and black women in america accessible for download cost-free. Search the site also as find Jean Campbell eBook in layout. We also have a fantastic collection of information connected to this Digitalbook for you. As well because the best part is you could assessment as well as download for sister citizen shame stereotypes and black women in america eBook

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Posted Content

On Measuring Social Biases in Sentence Encoders

TL;DR: The Word Embedding Association Test is extended to measure bias in sentence encoders and mixed results including suspicious patterns of sensitivity that suggest the test’s assumptions may not hold in general.
Journal ArticleDOI

Race matters for women leaders: Intersectional effects on agentic deficiencies and penalties

TL;DR: The authors examined the interactive effects of racial stereotypes and the agentic biases and found that when specific racial and gendered stereotypes are aligned with a specific dimension of agency, they can gain a more thorough understanding of how agentic bias may hinder women's progression to leadership positions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Troubled Success of Black Women in STEM

TL;DR: This article examined the experiences of three high achieving Black undergraduate and graduate women in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) and found that structural racism, sexism, and sexism were prevalent in their experiences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Black/Female/Body Hypervisibility and Invisibility: A Black Feminist Augmentation of Feminist Leisure Research

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose two concepts for Black feminist analysis (visibility and hypervisibility) to augment feminist leisure scholarship, and examine questions of invoicing and privilege.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Deadly Challenges of Raising African American Boys: Navigating the Controlling Image of the “Thug”

TL;DR: This paper examined how the controlling image of the "thug" influences the concerns these mothers have for their sons and how they parent their sons in light of those concerns, and found that mothers were concerned with preventing their sons from being perceived as criminals, protecting their sons' physical safety, and ensuring they did not enact the thug image, a form of subordinate masculinity.
References
More filters

The Role of Racial Identity, Parental Socialization, and School Connectedness on the Academic Experiences of Gifted Black Female Adolescents Attending Predominantly White Schools.

TL;DR: Johnson et al. as mentioned in this paper explored the role of race identity, parental socialization, and school connectedness on the academic experiences of Gifted Black female adolescents attending predominantly white schools and found that the gifted Black girls internalized their parents' racial, academic, and gender socialization messages enhanced their racial, gendered, and academic identities.

Unsilenced: Black Girls' Stories

LaToya Owens
TL;DR: This article explored Black high school girls' experiences in a predominately white suburban public school in the southeast of the US, using a critical raced-gendered epistemology, grounded in critical race theory and Black feminism/womanism.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Complicated Transformation: BEYONCÉ, “Blue,” and the Politics of Black Motherhood

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine how Beyonce as an artist has engaged with black feminist concepts of motherhood and what Camille Wilson Cooper calls "motherwork" and how does Beyonce's work complicate the binar...

A qualitative study exploring african-american lesbian mothers’ family experiences using both an intersectionality and a risk-resilience framework

Brie Radis
TL;DR: Sands et al. as mentioned in this paper explored the reasons for risk and what the parents think they need to protect members of this cultural group, their families, and their community, and examined the possible impact of the legalization of gay marriage on members who have partners and are raising children, identifying potential strategies to support lesbian-parenting families in which at least one partner is African American.