Feminism And The Destruction Of The Black Man

Decent Essays
We are in survival mode. Many of us have been miseducated, economically castrated, feminized, which leads to our incarceration. You have those black men, who do not want to step up to the plate and be men, because again, they have never had a male role model or a father in their life, or they have gotten too comfortable in this matrix that we live in, and are scared of change. Feminism also has to do with the destruction of the black community, which has affected the black man. Black women turning against us with the I don’t need a man mentality, stuck upon government assistance, or using the system against you so she can make money off of you, and not have to do anything. I’m not saying all, but be aware of these women. Also, a lot of these

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    According to the reading by Elise Johnson McDougald, the task of Negro Womanhood is interpret the lives of the negro women, as well as their occupations and duties they hold. McDougald goes into great detail about the lives and the jobs taken in Harlem by the Negro women. It explains in detail how far the Negro women have come and what they have accomplished. In this quote, the author proclaims "here, more than anywhere else, the negro women is free from the cruder handicaps of primitive household hardships and the grosser forms of sex and race subjugation. Here, she has considerable opportunity to measure her powers in the intellectual and industrial field of the great city" (McDougald, 68).…

    • 354 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    As the month of December hits, many people cannot wait for the mess of a year 2016 to be over. There have been many shocking debuts this past year, the most recent, the end of the election where the Electoral College votes were in the favor of Republican candidate Donald Trump. Once that information was released, panic ensued for many people, but this is not the only moment of panic that has occurred this year. In February, the one and only, Beyoncé Knowles, released her new single, “Formation”, which stirred up the pot of moral panic in the music industry. Her new hit single was filled with messages of pride as she willfully sings about her her identity and how she is very proud of it.…

    • 1961 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The critical piece of literature, “A Black Feminist Statement” by the Combahee River Collective, provides its readers with the backbone of what Black feminism is. The Combahee River Collective is a collection of Black feminists that established itself in 1974. Their fundamental cause is fighting “against racial, sexual, heterosexual, and class oppression” (A Black Feminist Statement 210). The Combahee River Collective, in other words, sees Black feminism as “the logical political movement to combat the manifold and simultaneous oppression that all women of color face” (A Black Feminist Statement 210). The theory of Black Feminism found in “A Black Feminist Statement” prepares an essential foundation for the novel Corregidora.…

    • 841 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Kimberle Crenshaw talks about this specifically when she reveals that black men are more likely to be charged with rape than men of another race. She says that they are also likely to serve the most amount of time if the person they raped was a white woman, and the least amount of time if the person they raped was a black woman. Meanwhile, black women are the least likely to be believed when they are raped, and their rapists serve the least time in prison. This is an interesting intersectional issue because it would seem like society would have us believe that the rapes of black women are illegitimate (especially if the rapes are perpetrated by white men), and that white women are especially vulnerable to rape (especially if their rapists are…

    • 240 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Paper 6 In his book The Condemnation of Blackness: Race, Crime, and the Making of Modern Urban America, author Khalil Gibran Muhammad works to answer a series of questions surrounding the “statistical link between blackness and criminality” (1), focusing on the core historical actors and the circumstances that were constructed to allow for the current reality that while African-Americans make up 12 percent of the general population, they make up 30 percent of the prison population (4). The issue becomes less about whether or not the committed crimes are real, but more about how the concept of Blackness historically became intrinsically linked with criminal behavior– so much so that criminality is undeniably linked with the image of the Black…

    • 876 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    The “Angry Black women” is a term that black women across america have been hearing since arriving in America. Cited in “The Angry Black Woman: The Impact Of Pejorative Stereotypes On Psychotherapy With Black Women” by Ashley, Wendy. Ashley states “The “angry Black woman” mythology presumes all Black women to be irate, irrational, hostile, and negative despite the circumstances.” Now through my research, I’ve to notice a pattern in that black women are always shown as aggressive, angry, and just plain inhuman. As Ashley states the idea that the angry black women exist is just that, and idea or “myth”.…

    • 1355 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Superior Essays

    There are many concepts discussed within Dr. Maulana Karenga’s book Introduction to Black Studies, but I will be thoroughly discussing Black Studies as a discipline, Black Liberation Theology, Black Womanist Theology, Religious Thrusts, the wealth and income and its influence on political empowerment, the reversal of ghettoization problem, economic and political empowerment of African Americans, Black on Black crime, Post-Traumatic Slave Syndrome, and Psychopathic Personality (2010). Fundamentally, I will discuss the challenges Black Studies creates for the traditional American education. Black Studies challenges the traditional education in every way. It challenges the fact that all knowledge is based on one particular race—White.…

    • 1721 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Defining “The Mask” of Black African American Women In the book of To Joy My Freedom it all began in the eighteen hundreds in the city of Atlanta. The Black women lived their life working on the field and as house slaves on plantations in antebellum cities that had been strictly under governed rules and regulations over which they had no control. “The black African American women were playfully constructing new identities that overturned notions of racial inferiority that could only be interpreted by white southerners” (Tera W. Hunter pg. 3).…

    • 1149 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Introduction Just as today, the industrial and urbanization was a significant apart of the American culture during the nineteenth century. Industrialization and urbanization, were like two gigantic hands touching the spinning clay on a potter’s wheel (Stubblefield & Keane, 1994). The inflexed of immigration in American change the way many structures grown and the United State begin to change to accommodate those measures. In the 1880s, the beginning of World War I, a new wave of immigrants from the peasant population of eastern and southern Europe settle in American cities (Stubblefield & Keane, 1994). This new movement allowed for whites and African Americans to begin to move to urban areas within the United States.…

    • 771 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The portrayal of black women has evolved greatly over time. From Oliva Pope in Scandal to Annalise in How to Get Away with Murder, black women are on-screen professionals now more than ever. Although black women are seen dealing with issues in their stories’ plot, the great majority of these plots take a back seat to the subplot of romance. The success of black women in media is relentlessly measured by their love life. Regardless of the success of their financial, employment, or platonic relationships, black women are still conceived in the media to act as if love will complete them.…

    • 2355 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    significant (p = .06); no such variations existed between the other clusters. Potential differences in sexual orientation, socioeconomic status (i.e., level of education obtained), and religion/spirituality based on cluster membership were explored using cross tabulation of frequencies and the Pearson chi-square statistic (i.e., dependent variable - gendered racial identity clusters; independent variable -demographic characteristics). Though there were relative differences in educational attainment between clusters, these differences were not significant. No other significant differences were identified. Qualitative Analysis of Blackness, Womanhood, and Black Womanhood…

    • 1539 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Process of Findings Going back to the history of the United States, there have been many social and political changes that have taken place. The Civil Rights struggle of the 1960s was one of the most significant and pivotal periods for achieving equality of all African Americans since the abolition of slavery in 1863 – the Thirteenth Amendment to the US Constitution. There was an ongoing conflict between the races of people who lived in the United States, predominantly black versus white. Black people were seen as inferior to that of white people and rights were violated on a continuous basis, purely because of the colour of that person’s skin. The Civil Rights ongoing struggle led to two distinct groups of black activists.…

    • 1254 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the paper the intention is to break down and analyze the book, “Blues Legacies and Black Feminism”, by author Angela Y. Davis. The authors background will be introduced with a basic biography followed by an in-depth analysis of the author’s educational background to give the author credibility to this topic. Mrs. Angel Yvonne Davis was born on the 26th day of January in Birmingham, Alabama. She was born in a time period in one of the most known segregated area in the south. She grew up in an area known as “Dynamite Hill” because of violent attacks on black families that moved into that area.…

    • 1048 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Black feminist thought can be thought of as an understanding behind the intersectionality of race and sex. The assumption that race and sex can be divorced and examined separately prevents many people from grasping the concept of black feminist thought. African-American women are a part of a minority race and minority sex, which they must live with on a daily basis. Therefore, examining race and sex separately is a distorted, biased, and inaccurate view on African-American women in society. As a member of the two of the lowest castes in American society, being a woman and being black, African-American women are often marginalized.…

    • 1544 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Decent Essays

    In my understanding of the terms black feminist essentialism is similar to feminist essentialism concerns black. In my opinion, essentialism itself is basically means that something shares all the same characteristics because of origin, and in this case of black feminist essentialism, it is race and gender oriented. Black feminist essentialism is saying that it can be biological, but also mean psychological. It is not a set meaning but it is encompassing saying that all women share the same characteristics, and that it is inherited because women are biologically structured the same.…

    • 209 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Decent Essays