1st Edition
WE Matter! Intersectional Anti-Racist Feminist Interventions with Black Girls and Women
Introduction
Wendi S. Williams
Complexifying What it Means to be Black and Female
1. Black Women: Then and Now
Diane M. Adams and Elana H. Lott
2. Developing a Black Feminist Analysis for Mental Health Practice: From Theory to Praxis
Lani V. Jones and Michelle A. Harris
3. Embodying Strength: The Origin, Representations, and Socialization of the Strong Black Woman Ideal and its Effect on Black Women’s Mental Health
Leeja Carter and Amerigo Rossi
4. Strong Like My Mama: The Legacy of “Strength,” Depression, and Suicidality in African American Women
Brandeis “Nilaja” Green
5. Voices Unheard: An Intersectional Approach to Understanding Depression among Middle- Class Black Women
Quenette L. Walton and Camille Boone
Conversations across Generations
6. “Why Doesn’t Anyone Help Us?”: Therapeutic Implications of Black Girls’ Perceptions of Health
Maryam M. Jernigan
7. Analyzed Selfie: Stereotype Enactment, Projection, and Identification Among Digitally Native Black Girls
Wendi S. Williams and Anissa L. Moody
8. Using Hair-Combing Interactions to Enhance Relationships between Black Women and Girls Impacted by Homelessness
Nola M. Butler Byrd, Michelle J. Rowe- Odom, Ojore L. Bushfan, Ava Gill, Kathleen Baca and Marva L. Lewis
9. Caregivers for the Elderly: Clinical Issues and Intervention
Yvonne Jenkins
Clinical and Training Implications
10. Still We Rise: Psychotherapy for African American Girls and Women Exiting Sex Trafficking
Thema Bryant-Davis and Robyn L. Gobin
11. Invisible Bruises: Theoretical and Practical Considerations for Black/ Afro- Latina Survivors of Childhood Sexual Abuse
Delida Sanchez, Luz Márquez Benbow, Martha Hernández-Martínez and Josephine V. Serrata
12. Living in the Margins: Intersecting Identities and Clinical Work with Black Women
Harriet Curtis- Boles
13. Training and Supervision Needs of Practitioners Working with African American Women
Sharlet A. Anderson and Leslie C. Jackson
Biography
Wendi S. Williams is a celebrated scholar, author, and educator, who has committed her life’s work to educate teachers, institutions, policymakers, advocates, and the general public on the intersections of education and psychology. Her work threads the intersection of psychology and education with Black women’s liberatory leadership practices to understand our everyday lived experiences and influence organizational health.






