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Black Feminist Thought

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254:(1936) similarly argue that the definition implies that the overall content of the thought and the historical and factual circumstances of Black women are inseparable. Proposition is that other groups in the field act as merely transcribers, whereas Black women are the actual authors. Second, the definition assumes that Black women possess a unique standpoint on, or perspective of, their experiences and that there will be certain commonalities of perception shared by Black women as a group. Third, while living life as Black women may produce certain commonalities of outlook, the diversity of class, region, age, and sexual orientation shaping individual Black women's lives has resulted in different expressions of these common themes. Thus, universal themes included in the Black women's standpoint may be experienced and expressed differently by distinct groups of Afro-American women. Finally, the definition assumes that, while a Black women's standpoint exists, its contours may not be clear to Black women themselves. Therefore, one role for Black female intellectuals is to produce facts and theories about the Black female experience that will clarify a Black woman's standpoint for Black women. In other words, Black feminist thought contains observations and interpretations about Afro-American womanhood that describe and explain different expressions of common themes. 324:
so long, reclaiming and centering these works not only preserves the intellectual traditions of past black women but also encourages continued contributions to black feminist thought. Collins also notes the importance in "discovering, reinterpreting, and analyzing the ideas of subgroups within the larger collectivity of U.S. Black women who have been silenced" meaning that we must also give equal attention to the groups of black women who have been especially marginalized, such as black lesbians. Collins describes the relationship between past and present intellectual traditions, suggesting that we use black feminists' theoretical frameworks of today, such as, race, class, and gender, to interpret the intellectual traditions of previously silenced black women. Collins' focus goes beyond black female academics; she argues that all forms of works be considered as black women's social thought which questions the definition of "intellectual" and allows for poetry, music, etc. to be considered as valid forms of social thought.
315:. While the domestic work gave black women an opportunity "to see White elites, both actual and aspiring, from perspectives largely obscured from Black men and from these groups themselves," they were still economically exploited by their white employers. Collins asserts that black women cannot fully be a member of feminist thought nor black social thought because the former assumes whiteness while the latter assumes maleness. The makeup of their identity and consequently their experiences as black women maintain their position as outsiders within spaces of oppression. However, as Collins notes, the black woman's position as an outsider-within provides her with a unique perspective on social, political, intellectual, and economic realities. Therefore, although black women are marginalized they can bring a more nuanced outlook to feminist and social thought. 333:
a White, male viewpoint, the work in having Black Feminist Thought recognized as legitimate is listed against varying frames of knowledge, one in particular, Positivist. The Positivist methodology would require the exclusion of self from Black women academics with the requirements of distancing one's self and their emotions from their work along with hostile confrontations with superiors. The implied separation of the personal and professional goes against the inherent value systems within Black communities that included varying areas of community, familial and religion. The intermeshing of these ideas also includes views that scholars view as feminist, with Black women having experiences pulling from their racial community and gender identity, their intellectual experiences, even through differences, still showcase similarities.
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objectified "other" is an important way of resisting the dehumanization essential to systems of domination. The status of being the "other" implies being "other than" or different from the assumed norm of white male behavior. In this model, powerful white males define themselves as subjects, the true actors, and classify people of color and white women in terms of their position vis-a-vis this white male hub. Since Black women have been denied the authority to challenge these definitions, this model consists of images that define Black women as a negative other, the virtual antithesis of positive white male images. Moreover, as Britain and Maynard (1984:199) point out, "domination always involves the objectification of the dominated; all forms of oppression imply the devaluation of the subjectivity of the oppressed."
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self-definition indicates a "collective Black women's consciousness". The expression of the black women's consciousness and standpoint is an integral part of developing Black feminist thought. Collins notes the importance of safe spaces for black women, where self-definition is not clouded by further objectification or silencing. Affirmation is also an important part of Collins' call for self-definition, which can take place in the individual friendships and familial relationships of black women. Collins describes the process of self-definition as a "journey form internalized oppression to the 'free mind'" in order to emphasize its significance in the formation of the collective consciousness of black women.
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oppression such as race, gender, socioeconomic status, age, and sexuality. Collins' matrix of domination works in four different domains: the structural domain, the disciplinary domain, the hegemonic domain, and the interpersonal domain. The structural domain functions to organize power and oppression, the disciplinary manages oppression in attempts to sustain it, the hegemonic functions to legitimize oppression, and the interpersonal domain controls the interactions and consciousness of individuals. Although all black women are within the matrix of domination, the differences in the intersections of oppression make the experiences and the perspectives of black women differ.
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experiences of Black girls, Jacobs explained how it is able to provide an "opportunity to develop critical media literacy skills." Knowing this frameworks aids in their own viewpoints and stances to media representations in understanding and deciphering the images and meaning behind such imagery. Moving beyond the surface images and using this framework as a means of combatting against the prevalent, normalized view of characters and ideals within the media that are shown as representations of and for young Black girls.
359:, the welfare mother, and the jezebel. She explains that the images constitute different oppressions simultaneous: the mammy works to make the defeminized black women and all oppressive factors against her seem natural, the welfare mother works to make the economically unfit black women and all oppressive factors against her seem natural, and the jezebel works to make the hypersexual black women and all oppressive factors against her seem natural. 32: 421:"With the publication of Black Feminist Thought, black feminism has moved to a new level. Her work sets a standard for the discussion of black women's lives, experiences, and thought that demands rigorous attention to the complexity of these experiences and an exploration of a multiplicity of responses." 412:
Black feminism remains important because U.S. Black women constitute an oppressed group. As a collectivity, U.S. Black women participate in a dialectical relationship linking African American women's oppression and activism. Dialectical relationships of this sort mean that two parties are opposed and
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The University of Cincinnati named Collins The Charles Phelps Taft Professor of Sociology in 1996, making her the first ever African-American, and only the second woman, to hold this position. She received Emeritus status in the Spring of 2005, and became a professor of sociology at the University of
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Black women's work within the academy faces a double meaning of exclusion. The exclusion of the work of Black Feminist Thought or the exclusion of their own selves from Black women academicians, all for the sake of visibility and acceptance within the academy. Through academic frameworks built around
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Collins' discussion of controlling images focuses on the negative stereotypical representations and images of black women. These representations continue to oppress black women as they continue to perpetuate the dominant subject's definition of the object i.e. the black woman. The images' pervasive
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Collins pinpoints intellectual activism as a key process in developing black feminist thought. She articulates the reclaiming of "black feminist intellectual traditions" as one of the most important pillars of intellectual activism. Since the intellectual work of black women has been suppressed for
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in 1990. According to the American Sociological Association, "The Jessie Bernard Award is given in recognition of scholarly work that has enlarged the horizons of sociology to encompass fully the role of women in society. The contribution may be in empirical research, theory, or methodology. It is
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Black Feminist Thought provides a synthesis of a body of knowledge that is crucial to putting in perspective the situation of Black Women and their place in the overall struggle to reduce and eliminate gender, race, and class inequalities. The book provides an analysis of the ideas of Black Women,
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For young Black girls, the manipulation of images is also an influence. From a 2016 study by University of Pennsylvania associate professor, Charlotte E. Jacobs, utilizing Black Feminist Thought as an educational work for Black girls in media depictions. Coupled with the inherent knowledge and
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refers to how intersections of oppression are structurally organized. It explains the way "structural, disciplinary, hegemonic, and interpersonal domains of power reappear across quite different forms of oppression". The matrix of domination is made up of varying combinations of intersecting
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Black women's insistence on self-definition, self-valuation, and the necessity for a Black female-centered analysis is significant for two reasons. First, defining and valuing one's consciousness of one's own self-defined standpoint in the face of images that foster a self-definition as the
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Self-definition is "the power to name one's own reality" Collins articulates black women's resistance against controlling images as an important step for practicing self-definition. The rejection of the dominant group's definition of black women and black women's imposition of their own
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nature aid in sustaining intersecting oppression because they " the dominant group's interest in maintaining Black women's subordination. These images are used to make black women's oppression seem natural and normal. Collins' critique on controlling images includes an analysis of the
394:, Collins gained more recognition as a "social theorist, drawing from many intellectual traditions." Collins' work has now been published and used in many different fields including philosophy, history, psychology and sociology. 413:
opposite. As long as Black women's subordination within intersecting oppressions of race, class, gender, sexuality, and nation persists, Black feminism as an activist response to that oppression will remain needed.
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in a former essay and redefines the term in her book to describe the experience of black women. In the book, she historically situates the term to describe the social location of black women in domestic work
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Black feminist thought is a field of knowledge that is focused on the perspectives and experiences of Black women. There are several arguments in support of this definition. First, Peter Berger and
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The Society for the Study of Social Problems "annually gives its C. Wright Mills Award to the author of what the committee considers to be the most outstanding book written in the tradition of
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intellectuals and writers, both within the academy and without. Here Collins provides an interpretive framework for the work of such prominent Black feminist thinkers as
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In spite of the double burden of racial and gender discrimination, African-American women have developed a rich intellectual tradition that is not widely known. In
290:. Drawing from fiction, poetry, music, and oral history, the result is a book that provided the first synthetic overview of Black feminist thought and its canon. 53: 46: 1082: 449: 821:
Developing the "Oppositional Gaze": Using Critical Media Pedagogy and Black Feminist Thought to Promote Black Girls' Identity Development
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Maryland, College Park. The University of Maryland named Collins a Distinguished University Professor in 2006."
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and his dedication to a search for a sophisticated understanding of the individual and society."
42: 270:, originally published in 1990, Patricia Hill Collins set out to explore the words and ideas of 946: 877: 754: 780: 731: 638: 612: 510: 445: 303: 227: 146: 961: 938: 915: 892: 869: 795: 772: 746: 723: 653: 630: 604: 581: 515:"Learning from the outsider within: the sociological significance of black feminist thought" 437: 342: 8: 962: 916: 893: 796: 654: 582: 135: 1021: 1013: 850: 818: 704: 546: 538: 172: 838: 1025: 939: 870: 854: 842: 773: 747: 724: 708: 696: 631: 605: 550: 208: 1005: 834: 688: 528: 425:
particularly those ideas that reflect a consciousness in opposition to oppression.
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Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment.
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presented for significant cumulative work done throughout a professional career."
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Newby, Robert G.; King, Deborah K.; Thorne, Barrie (1992). "Review Symposium".
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is used in various university African American and Women Studies courses.
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Link to The Society for the Study of Social Problems Website
327: 407: 816: 677:"The Social Construction of Black Feminist Thought" 233: 1048:Link to American Sociological Association Website 362: 1064: 995: 681:Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 476: 1043:A Conversation with Dr. Patricia Hill Collins 505: 503: 450:The Society for the Study of Social Problems 500: 134: 532: 116:Learn how and when to remove this message 477:Berger, Peter; Luckmann, Thomas (1966). 318: 959: 936: 913: 890: 867: 793: 770: 744: 721: 674: 651: 628: 602: 579: 509: 491: 336: 1065: 52:Please improve this article by adding 766: 764: 349: 1083:Literature by African-American women 675:Collins, Patricia Hill (July 1989). 624: 622: 575: 573: 416: 25: 567:. New York: Routledge, 2000. Print. 261: 13: 761: 479:The Social Construction of Reality 385: 371: 328:Balancing of Intellectual Activism 298: 244:The Social Construction of Reality 16:1990 book by Patricia Hill Collins 14: 1094: 1036: 986:New York: Routledge, 2000. 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Jacobs (2016). 380: 7: 10: 1099: 1010:10.1177/089124392006003009 18: 428: 207: 199: 189: 181: 160: 152: 142: 133: 982:Hill, Collins Patricia. 563:Hill, Collins Patricia. 65:"Black Feminist Thought" 1058:Women's Review of Books 1073:1990 non-fiction books 968:. Routledge. pp.  945:. Routledge. pp.  922:. Routledge. pp.  899:. Routledge. pp.  876:. Routledge. pp.  802:. Routledge. pp.  779:. Routledge. pp.  753:. Routledge. pp.  730:. Routledge. pp.  660:. Routledge. pp.  637:. Routledge. pp.  611:. Routledge. pp.  588:. Routledge. pp.  511:Collins, Patricia Hill 492:Manheim, Karl (1936). 444:(ASA) in 1993 and the 434:Black Feminist Thought 402:Black Feminist Thought 392:Black Feminist Thought 268:Black Feminist Thought 41:relies excessively on 496:. Martino Fine Books. 446:C. Wright Mills Award 319:Intellectual activism 304:Patricia Hill Collins 228:Patricia Hill Collins 147:Patricia Hill Collins 19:For the concept, see 1078:Black feminist books 438:Jessie Bernard Award 390:With the success of 343:matrix of domination 337:Matrix of domination 494:Ideology and Utopia 252:Ideology and Utopia 130: 998:Gender and Society 350:Controlling images 226:is a 1990 book by 128: 513:(December 1986). 417:Editorial reviews 219: 218: 214:978-0-04-445137-2 126: 125: 118: 100: 1090: 1030: 1029: 993: 987: 980: 974: 973: 967: 957: 951: 950: 944: 934: 928: 927: 921: 911: 905: 904: 898: 888: 882: 881: 875: 865: 859: 858: 814: 808: 807: 801: 791: 785: 784: 778: 768: 759: 758: 752: 742: 736: 735: 729: 719: 713: 712: 672: 666: 665: 659: 649: 643: 642: 636: 626: 617: 616: 610: 600: 594: 593: 587: 577: 568: 561: 555: 554: 536: 507: 498: 497: 489: 483: 482: 474: 262:Book description 191:Publication date 138: 131: 127: 121: 114: 110: 107: 101: 99: 58: 34: 26: 1098: 1097: 1093: 1092: 1091: 1089: 1088: 1087: 1063: 1062: 1039: 1034: 1033: 994: 990: 981: 977: 958: 954: 935: 931: 912: 908: 889: 885: 866: 862: 815: 811: 792: 788: 769: 762: 743: 739: 720: 716: 673: 669: 650: 646: 627: 620: 601: 597: 578: 571: 562: 558: 520:Social Problems 508: 501: 490: 486: 481:. 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Index

Black feminism

references
primary sources
secondary or tertiary sources
"Black Feminist Thought"
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JSTOR
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Patricia Hill Collins
Black feminism
women's studies
ISBN
978-0-04-445137-2
Patricia Hill Collins
Thomas Luckmann
Karl Manheim
Black feminist
Angela Davis
bell hooks
Alice Walker
Audre Lorde
Patricia Hill Collins
World War II
matrix of domination
mammy

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