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Black Womens Stories of Everyday Racism: Narrative Analysis for Social Change [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 118 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 453 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Apr-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032606622
  • ISBN-13: 9781032606620
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 191,26 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 118 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 453 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Apr-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032606622
  • ISBN-13: 9781032606620
"Black Women's Stories of Everyday Racism puts literary narrative theory to work on an urgent real-world problem. The book calls attention to African American women's everyday experiences with systemic racism and demonstrates how four types of narrative theory can help generate strategies to explain and dismantle that racism. This volume presents fifteen stories told by eight midwestern African American women about their own experiences with casual and structural racism, followed by four detailed narratological analyses of the stories, each representing a different approach to narrative interpretation. The book makes a case for the need to hear the personal stories of these women and others like them as part of a larger effort to counter the systemic racism that prevails in the United States today. Readers will find that the women's stories offer powerful evidence that African Americans experience racism as an inescapable part of their day-to-day lives--and sometimes as a force that radically changes their lives. The stories provide experience-based demonstrations of how pervasive systemic racism is and how it perpetuates power differentials that are baked into institutions such as schools, law enforcement, the health care system, and business. Containing countless signs of the stress and trauma that accompany and follow from experiences of racism, the stories reveal evidence of the women's resilience as well as their unending need for it, as they continue to feel the negative effects of experiences thatoccurred many years ago. The four interpretive chapters note the complex skill involved in the women's storytelling. The analyses also point to the overall value of telling these stories: how they are sometimes cathartic for the tellers; how they highlight the importance of listening-and the likelihood of misunderstanding-and how, if they and other stories like them were heard more often, they would be a force to counteract the structural racism they so graphically expose"--

Black Women’s Stories of Everyday Racism puts literary narrative theory to work on an urgent real-world problem. The book calls attention to African American women’s everyday experiences with systemic racism and demonstrates how four types of narrative theory can help generate strategies to explain and dismantle that racism. This volume presents fifteen stories told by eight midwestern African American women about their own experiences with casual and structural racism, followed by four detailed narratological analyses of the stories, each representing a different approach to narrative interpretation. The book makes a case for the need to hear the personal stories of these women and others like them as part of a larger effort to counter the systemic racism that prevails in the United States today.

Readers will find that the women’s stories offer powerful evidence that African Americans experience racism as an inescapable part of their day-to-day lives—and sometimes as a force that radically changes their lives. The stories provide experience-based demonstrations of how pervasive systemic racism is and how it perpetuates power differentials that are baked into institutions such as schools, law enforcement, the health care system, and business. Containing countless signs of the stress and trauma that accompany and follow from experiences of racism, the stories reveal evidence of the women’s resilience as well as their unending need for it, as they continue to feel the negative effects of experiences that occurred many years ago. The four interpretive chapters note the complex skill involved in the women’s storytelling. The analyses also point to the overall value of telling these stories: how they are sometimes cathartic for the tellers; how they highlight the importance of listening—and the likelihood of misunderstanding—and how, if they and other stories like them were heard more often, they would be a force to counteract the structural racism they so graphically expose.

The Open Access version of this book, available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) 4.0 license.



Black Women’s Stories of Everyday Racism puts literary narrative theory to work on an urgent real-world problem.

Part I. Black Womens Stories of Everyday Racism

Chapter
1. I Keep Most White People at a Distance

Ronda C. Henry Anthony

Chapter
2. I Would Love to Have Had that Conversation with Him

Scotia Brown

Chapter
3. Something I Never Recovered From

Mary Bullock

Chapter
4. Women of Color Really Have to Understand, or Overstand

Stephanie Caraway

Chapter
5. No One Even Knows the Real Story

Destiny Faceson

Chapter
6. At that Moment I FeltDismissed

Felicia Haney

Chapter
7. I Was Never Considered an Asset to their Company in the First
Place

Lucrezia Hatfield

Chapter
8. Racism Has Truly Shaped My Choices and How I Act

Latoya Hale Tahirou

Part II. Introduction to the Narrative Analyses of the Womens Stories

Chapter
9. Testifyin and Signifyin: Black Womens Narratives on Navigating
Structural Racism in Central Indiana

Simone Drake

Chapter
10. She Was Not Heard: Personal Narratives that Tackle Structural
Racism

Robyn Warhol

Chapter
11. Metacognition and Miscommunication: Interpreting Metacognitive
Monitoring in African-American Womens Storytelling

Lisa Zunshine

Chapter
12. Rhetorical Listening: Character, Progression, and Fictionality in
African American Womens Stories of Everyday Racism

James Phelan

Appendix: Storytelling Prompts Provided by the Researchers
Simone Drake, Hazel C. Youngberg Trustees Distinguished Professor of English at Ohio State University, is executive producer of Shutdown (2023) and author or editor of the following books: Critical Appropriation: African American Woman and the Construction of Transnational Identity (2014), When We Imagine Grace: Black Men and Subject Making (2016), Are You Entertained?: Black Popular Culture in the 21st Century (2020), and The Oxford Handbook of African American Womens Writing (2024).

James Phelan, Distinguished University Professor of English at Ohio State University, is the author, co-author, editor, or co-editor of over 20 books, including Somebody Telling Somebody Else (2017), Debating Rhetorical Narratology (with Matthew Clark, 2020), and Narrative Medicine: A Rhetorical Rx (2023). He has been editor of Narrative since its inception in 1993.

Robyn Warhol, College of Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor of English at Ohio State University, has recently published The Edinburgh Companion to Contemporary Narrative Theories (co-edited with Zara Dinnen, 2018), Narrative Theory Unbound (co-edited with Susan S. Lanser, 2015), and Love Among the Archives (co-authored with Helena Michie, 2015).

Lisa Zunshine, Professor of English at the University of Kentucky, is a former Guggenheim fellow and the author or editor of 12 books, including Getting Inside Your Head (2012), The Oxford Handbook of Cognitive Literary Studies (2015), and The Secret Life of Literature (2022).