Mapping Gender in African-American Political Strategies

Authors

  • Leith Mullings

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14452/MR-071-04-2019-08_5

Keywords:

Sex, Feminism, Marxism, Inequality

Abstract

Gender is not just about women; it is about the social relationship between men and women and the dialectical, reciprocal, and cultural construction of femininity and masculinity. Recognition of a unique historical experience concerning gender informs the perspectives of African Americans of various political persuasions. This history incorporates a land of origin with certain common principles about gender and family. It also encompasses the African-American experience in the United States where the denial of many "protections" offered by gender roles and indeed sometimes inversion of such roles was a means of maintaining control. Hence asserting the right to assume gender-based roles of husband, father, wife, and mother paradoxically was an act of resistance. The manner in which African-American people have envisioned relationships of gender in light of that history has expressed itself in markedly different forms.

Published

2019-09-01

Issue

Section

Reprise