400 Pages
by Routledge

400 Pages
by Routledge

In this groundbreaking book, one of the foremost writers on race and gender brilliantly maps the complex intersection of race, gender, and sexuality in contemporary American society. Patricia Hill Collins explores how the construction of stereotypical images - from the "welfare mom" to the "brutish athlete" and "irresponsible father" - perpetuate a new form of racism that continues to oppress... Read more

Preface to the Routledge Classics Edition

Acknowledgements

Introduction: No Turning Back

Part 1: African Americans and the New Racism

1. Why Black Sexual Politics?

2. The Past Is Ever Present: Recognizing the New Racism

3. Prisons for Our Bodies, Closets for Our Minds: Racism, Heterosexism, and Black Sexuality

Part 2: Rethinking Black Gender Ideology

4. Get Your Freak On: Sex, Babies, and Images of Black Femininity

5. Booty Call: Sex, Violence, and Images of Black Masculinity

6. Very Necessary: Redefining Black Gender Ideology

Part 3: Toward a Progressive Black Sexual Politics

7. Assume the Position: The Changing Contours of Sexual Violence

8. No Storybook Romance: How Race and Gender Matter

9. Why We Can't Wait: Black Sexual Politics and the Challenge of HIV/AIDS 

Afterword: The Power of a Free Mind.

Glossary

Bibliography

Index

Biography

Patricia Hill Collins is Distinguished University Professor of Sociology Emerita at the University of Maryland, College Park, USA, and Charles Phelps Taft Professor Emerita of African American Studies at the University of Cincinnati, USA. She is the author of over ten books, including her award-winning classics Black Feminist Thought and Black Sexual Politics. Professor Collins has lectured widely in the United States, Europe, and Brazil. She was the 2009 President of the American Sociological Association (ASA), the first African-American woman elected to this position in the organization’s 104-year history. Professor Collins has won numerous professional awards, among them the William E.B. DuBois Career of Distinguished Scholarship Award from ASA (2017), the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Association of Black Sociologists (2018), the Alumni Award from Brandeis University (2021), the Common Wealth Award of Distinguished Service for Sociology (2021), and the Berggruen Prize in Philosophy and Culture (2023).

"Patricia Hill Collins' brilliant and ground-breaking analysis of the urgency of a more progressive Black sexual politics among African Americans is nothing short of a 'tour de force.' This book is sure to be a foundational text in Black gender studies and a corrective to the continued erasure of gender and sexuality as important issues in mainstream African American Studies scholarship. Her foray into popular culture is particularly insightful as is her sophisticated theoretical approach to Black gender discourse around a number of issues including class dimensions of masculinity, violence against women, and HIV/AIDS. She demonstrates with extraordinary skill the bankruptcy of gender-blind anti-racist politics in the 21st century. Her wake-up call to Black America and the nation is heart-felt and piercing. No more business-as-usual is the loud message!" 

Beverly Guy-Sheftall, co-author of Gender Talk

"A leading scholar in the field of black feminist studies, Patricia Hill Collins once again challenges readers to think differently, this time about sexuality in black communities. Collins argues for a new black sexual politics, focused on liberating black women and men and highlighting the role of culture in this struggle. This book is sure to spark needed and timely debate." 

Cathy J. Cohen, author of The Boundaries of Blackness

"A pathbreaking exploration of complex intersections of racism, sexism, and heterosexism! Patricia Hill Collins shows how unhealthy sexual politics in black communities imbeds white-generated images of stereotyped masculinity, femininity, and sexuality. A well-documented argument for countering and replacing the sexist-racist views of hyper-sexual, too-strong black women and sexually irresponsible, too-weak black men both within and outside black communities." 

Joe R. Feagin, author of Racist America

"Patricia Hill Collins has done it again! In her brilliant new book, Collins deepens her analysis of the intersections and hierarchies of race, gender, sexuality and class, and extends her theoretical gaze with fresh and provocative interpretations of black popular culture. Black Sexual Politics charts the subtle evolution of a new racism that often goes undetected--and unaccounted for--while grappling with the complexities and contradictions within black life. This book is at once a theoretical tour de force and a must-read for all who care about the lives of black folk in the twenty-first century."  

Michael Eric Dyson, author of Why I Love Black Women

"Collins expands the horizons of feminist and anti-racist thinking about some of the most disturbing issues of the contemporary post-civil rights era. Her focus on historical specificity of African American conditions and struggles illuminates the contours of--and strategies for--social justice projects in global as well as local political contexts. This book makes a distinguished contribution to critical theory and to classroom resources." 

Sandra Harding, editor of The Feminist Standpoint Theory Reader

"This well written text...[is] strongly recommend for public and academic libraries." 

Library Journal

"Black Sexual Politics is one of the most steaming mad books on sexuality since the days of Andrea Dworkin...It constitutes a breakthrough." 

Village Voice

"For the last 15 years Patricia Hill Collins has been one of the defining voices of contemporary feminist and race scholarship...As is true for many comparable works of such breadth, the primary contribution of Black Sexual Politics is not so much the new data as it is the skillful synthesis and application of post civil rights scholarship on contemporary culture...The result is a race/class/gender/sexuality text-book on Black life that displays the ongoing relevance and utility of such scholarship when alchemically transformed through intersectionality. Indeed, I often thought while reading this book that it would be an excellent way to introduce students to race/class/gender/sexuality for it brings the principles and data up-to-date." 

Contemporary Sociology