|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
The National Institute of Justice (NIJ) is the research,
development and evaluation agency of the US Department of Justice.
The NIJ is dedicated to improving knowledge and understanding of
crime and justice issues through science. NIJ provides objective
and independent knowledge and tools to reduce crime and promote
justice, particularly at the state and local levels. Each year, the
NIJ publishes and sponsors dozens of research and study documents
detailing results, analyses and statistics that help to further the
organization's mission. These documents relate to topics like
biometrics, corrections technology, gun violence, digital
forensics, human trafficking, electronic crime, terrorism, tribal
justice and more. This document is one of these publications.
In the wake of the Great Migration of thousands of African
Americans from the scattered hamlets and farms of the rural South
to the nation's burgeoning cities, a New Negro ethos of modernist
cultural expression and potent self-determination arose to
challenge white supremacy and create opportunities for racial
advancement. In Prove It On Me, Erin D. Chapman explores the gender
and sexual politics of this modern racial ethos and reveals the
constraining and exploitative underside of the New Negro era's
vaunted liberation and opportunities. Chapman's cultural history
documents the effects on black women of the intersection of
primitivism, New Negro patriarchal aspirations, and the early
twentieth-century consumer culture. As U.S. society invested in the
New Negroes, turning their expressions and race politics into
entertaining commodities in a sexualized, primitivist popular
culture, the New Negroes invested in the idea of black womanhood as
a pillar of stability against the unsettling forces of myriad
social and racial transformations. And both groups used black
women's bodies and identities to "prove" their own modern notions
and new identities. Chapman's analysis brings together
advertisements selling the blueswoman to black and white consumers
in a "sex-race marketplace," the didactic preachments of New Negro
reformers advocating a conservative gender politics of "race
motherhood," and the words of the New Negro women authors and
migrants who boldly or implicitly challenged these dehumanizing
discourses. Prove It On Me investigates the uses made of black
women's bodies in 1920s popular culture and racial politics and
black women's opportunities to assert their own modern, racial
identities.
|
You may like...
Ab Wheel
R209
R149
Discovery Miles 1 490
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R369
Discovery Miles 3 690
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R369
Discovery Miles 3 690
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.