Tuesday 30 March 2010

The Burden of The Black Woman




{...rio correndo do fundo do utero pelos olhos...}

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This book examines the historical endeavors to regulate Black female sexuality and reproduction in the United States, through methods of exploitation, control, repression, and coercion. To that end, this book further explores the continued impact of labeling and stereotyping on the development of policies that lead to the construction of national, racial, and gender identities for Black women.


“A well researched, well written, and historically imperative work that adds racial, political, and economic context to the issue of reproductive rights. Black Women’s Burden will likely inform future reproductive rights research in considering the relevance of social rhetoric, and political and economic climates in the examination of women’s experiences.”—Journal of African American Studies

“Black Woman’s Burden is a book that should be read by everyone who believes in human rights. It is that rare book that marries political economy with the reproductive rights of an oppressed class. Once more we see in her brilliant work that the personal experiences have political and historical antecedents. Despite the fact that black women are the most dedicated, educated, and stable members of the black community, they remain the most devalued and stigmatized group among the panorama of sub-groups in the United States. This book explores how a predatory political and economic system operates to deprive her of control over her body, a condition that has existed since her introduction to the new world. This book is worth our reading and, more importantly, needs our action to redress these acts of oppression that remain a fundamental part of her life.”--Robert Staples, Emeritus Professor, Graduate Program in Sociology, University of California, San Francisco

“Nicole Rousseau brings a powerful critical lens to a topic frequently ignored, except as a problem rooted in bad behavior: Black Women’s reproduction. In Black Women’s Burden, Professor Rousseau deploys a cogent historical materialist analysis to Black women’s sexual and reproductive histories. Centrally, her point of departure is political economic, articulating Black women’s historical relations with the capitalist state. Herein is rooted, she argues, the regulation of Black women’s reproduction and resistance to such regulation. Rousseau makes quite a compelling case.”--Rose M. Brewer, Professor of African American & African Studies, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities


[More details here]




{...rio correndo do fundo do utero pelos olhos...}

*


This book examines the historical endeavors to regulate Black female sexuality and reproduction in the United States, through methods of exploitation, control, repression, and coercion. To that end, this book further explores the continued impact of labeling and stereotyping on the development of policies that lead to the construction of national, racial, and gender identities for Black women.


“A well researched, well written, and historically imperative work that adds racial, political, and economic context to the issue of reproductive rights. Black Women’s Burden will likely inform future reproductive rights research in considering the relevance of social rhetoric, and political and economic climates in the examination of women’s experiences.”—Journal of African American Studies

“Black Woman’s Burden is a book that should be read by everyone who believes in human rights. It is that rare book that marries political economy with the reproductive rights of an oppressed class. Once more we see in her brilliant work that the personal experiences have political and historical antecedents. Despite the fact that black women are the most dedicated, educated, and stable members of the black community, they remain the most devalued and stigmatized group among the panorama of sub-groups in the United States. This book explores how a predatory political and economic system operates to deprive her of control over her body, a condition that has existed since her introduction to the new world. This book is worth our reading and, more importantly, needs our action to redress these acts of oppression that remain a fundamental part of her life.”--Robert Staples, Emeritus Professor, Graduate Program in Sociology, University of California, San Francisco

“Nicole Rousseau brings a powerful critical lens to a topic frequently ignored, except as a problem rooted in bad behavior: Black Women’s reproduction. In Black Women’s Burden, Professor Rousseau deploys a cogent historical materialist analysis to Black women’s sexual and reproductive histories. Centrally, her point of departure is political economic, articulating Black women’s historical relations with the capitalist state. Herein is rooted, she argues, the regulation of Black women’s reproduction and resistance to such regulation. Rousseau makes quite a compelling case.”--Rose M. Brewer, Professor of African American & African Studies, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities


[More details here]

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