Trauma Technicians and Wounded Warriors: Using a Black Feminist Lens to Understand How Black Women Clergy and Lay Leaders Resist Anti-Black State Violence

Q2 Social Sciences
Ebonie Cunningham Stringer
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT Black women of faith have always been critical to the mobilization of Black churches and communities resisting state violence and injustice. Yet religious institutions led by Black men are often perceived to be the most important conduits of Black progress. Moreover, the sociology of religion tends to center a Eurocentric male lens that marginalizes and erases the gendered experiences of women of color. This multimethod study employs a Black feminist lens to explore the activism of 28 Black women clergy and lay leaders in response to anti-Black state violence from the post-Ferguson era through the COVID-19 pandemic. Findings illuminate the ways in which Black women work to ensure the survival of their communities and other women in the face of trauma and their strategies to uproot racist systems that perpetuate state violence against Black bodies. Findings also illumine the ways in which Black church culture, gender, and race shape Black women’s theology, activism, and imaginings of justice.
创伤技术人员和受伤的战士:用黑人女权主义的视角理解黑人女性神职人员和非神职人员领导人如何抵制反黑人国家暴力
摘要:有信仰的黑人女性一直是动员黑人教会和社区抵制国家暴力和不公正的关键。然而,由黑人领导的宗教机构往往被认为是黑人进步的最重要渠道。此外,宗教社会学倾向于以欧洲为中心的男性视角,边缘化和抹去有色人种女性的性别经历。这项多方法研究采用了黑人女权主义视角,探讨了从后弗格森时代到新冠肺炎大流行,28名黑人女神职人员和世俗领袖在应对反黑人国家暴力方面的积极行动。调查结果阐明了黑人妇女在创伤面前为确保社区和其他妇女的生存而努力的方式,以及她们根除使国家暴力侵害黑人身体的种族主义制度的策略。研究结果还揭示了黑人教会文化、性别和种族如何塑造黑人女性的神学、激进主义和对正义的想象。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Sociological Focus
Sociological Focus Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
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