The Black woman carries a hauntingly powerful legacy crafted by the soils of Africa, watered by the dew of the Atlantic, and fueled by glowing rays of sun. Yet, many only see her as a caricature living for the pleasure, enjoyment, and entertainment of others. A Black woman cannot express herself because doing so makes her angry and bitter, and her body serves as a stencil for those who want her shape and lips and as a fantasy. This paper analyzes how society uses the media, literature, and art to justify the need to police the bodies and expression (sexual and emotional) of Black women in America. The degradation, colonization, and exploitation of the Black female body during slavery justified inhumane treatment, such as rape, abuse, and mo...
Thesis (B.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Humanities, 1986.Includes bibliograph...
Black women often receive the short stick when it comes to positive and fulfilling portrayals of the...
“Visualizing Erotic Freedom” shows how contemporary Black comedic TV draws on the aesthetic legacy o...
To what do we owe Black women? Everything. To be Black and female in America means that you are igno...
The Women of the Black Arts Movement and the Rise of the Ancestors Kim Cheryl McMillonDoctor of Phil...
The colonization of women’s bodies and lives on a global scale has been a major factor of the perpet...
The ways in which African American women negotiate the intersections of popular media, dominant disc...
“Now, women forget all those things they don’t want to remember, and remember everything they don’t ...
That the Black woman must be strong in order to endure the oppression she has been forced to withsta...
Transnationally, black women, due to their “multiple subjectivities” of race, gender, and other iden...
Transnationally, black women, due to their “multiple subjectivities” of race, gender, and other iden...
Transnationally, black women, due to their “multiple subjectivities” of race, gender, and other iden...
While much has been made of the dominant culture\u27s use of radical monsters in the US national nar...
Historically, Black women have spent generations in the servitude of white society. Over the centuri...
The main aim of this paper is to apply black feminist tenets especially those of Bell Hooks and Alic...
Thesis (B.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Humanities, 1986.Includes bibliograph...
Black women often receive the short stick when it comes to positive and fulfilling portrayals of the...
“Visualizing Erotic Freedom” shows how contemporary Black comedic TV draws on the aesthetic legacy o...
To what do we owe Black women? Everything. To be Black and female in America means that you are igno...
The Women of the Black Arts Movement and the Rise of the Ancestors Kim Cheryl McMillonDoctor of Phil...
The colonization of women’s bodies and lives on a global scale has been a major factor of the perpet...
The ways in which African American women negotiate the intersections of popular media, dominant disc...
“Now, women forget all those things they don’t want to remember, and remember everything they don’t ...
That the Black woman must be strong in order to endure the oppression she has been forced to withsta...
Transnationally, black women, due to their “multiple subjectivities” of race, gender, and other iden...
Transnationally, black women, due to their “multiple subjectivities” of race, gender, and other iden...
Transnationally, black women, due to their “multiple subjectivities” of race, gender, and other iden...
While much has been made of the dominant culture\u27s use of radical monsters in the US national nar...
Historically, Black women have spent generations in the servitude of white society. Over the centuri...
The main aim of this paper is to apply black feminist tenets especially those of Bell Hooks and Alic...
Thesis (B.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Humanities, 1986.Includes bibliograph...
Black women often receive the short stick when it comes to positive and fulfilling portrayals of the...
“Visualizing Erotic Freedom” shows how contemporary Black comedic TV draws on the aesthetic legacy o...