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Black Women, Cultural Images and Social Policy

By Julia S. Jordan-Zachery

Published December 12th 2008 by Routledge – 220 pages

Series: Routledge Studies in North American Politics

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Description

Black Women, Cultural Images and Social Policy offers a critical analysis of the policy-making process. Jordan-Zachery demonstrates how social meanings surrounding the discourses on crime, welfare and family policies produce and reproduce discursive practices that maintain gender and racial hierarchies. Using critical discourse analysis (CDA), she analyzes the values and ideologies ensconced in the various images of black womanhood and their impact on policy formation. This book provides exceptional insight into the racing-gendering process of policy making to show how relations of power and forms of inequality are discursively constructed and impact the lives of African American women.

Contents

1. Perceptions, Culture and Policy: A Racing-Gendering Perspective 2. Mythical Illusions: Cultural Images and Black Womanhood 3. Mammy is a Maniac: Black Women, Images, and Crime 4. You Better Work: ‘Rehabilitation’ and Welfare Policy 5. The Government’s ‘Make a Man Kit’: Family Policies 6. For Us by Us: Redefining Black Womanhood

Author Bio

Julia S. Jordan-Zachery is Director of the Black Studies Program and Assistant Professor of Political Science, Providence College. Her research focuses on developing a critical policy analysis. Recent articles have appeared in Souls: A Critical Journal of Black Politics, Culture, and Society, National Political Science Review, Journal of Social Policy, Politics & Gender.

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Name: Black Women, Cultural Images and Social Policy (Hardback)Routledge 
Description: By Julia S. Jordan-Zachery. Black Women, Cultural Images and Social Policy offers a critical analysis of the policy-making process. Jordan-Zachery demonstrates how social meanings surrounding the discourses on crime, welfare and family policies produce and reproduce discursive...
Categories: Gender, Black Studies - Race & Ethnic Studies, Politics & the Media