Citations:misogynoir

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English citations of misogynoir

Noun: "(neologism) hatred of, contempt for, or prejudice against black women"[edit]

2013 2014 2015 2020
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  • 2013, Aisha Durham, Brittany C. Cooper, & Susana M. Morris, "The Stage Hip-Hop Feminism Built: A New Directions Essay", Signs, Volume 38, Number 3, Spring 2013, page 730:
    Hip-hop feminist studies continues to tackle black sexual politics by discussing and challenging the persistence and prevalence of hip-hop "misogynoir" (the hatred of black women and girls), respectability politics, and compulsory heterosexuality within the music and the culture at large.
  • 2013, Zenzele Isoke, "Women, Hip Hop, and Cultural Resistance in Dubai", Souls: A Critical Journal of Black Politics, Culture, and Society, Volume 15, Issue 4, October-December 2013, page 334:
    Lil Wayne has been broadly critiqued by black feminist bloggers for egregious instances of misogynoir in his lyrics.
  • 2014, Jade Danielle Coley, "Sexual and Reproductive Health Care Access for African American Sexual Minority Women", thesis submitted to the University of Pittsburgh and approved on 26 March 2014, page 4:
    The health inequities that AA SMW [African-American sexual minority women] face may stem from the historical and modern structure of racism, sexism, misogynoir (hatred of Black women), and homoantagonism (active hostility or opposition to homosexual people).
  • 2014, Brianne A. Painia, "'My Crown Too Heavy Like the Queen Nefertiti': A Black Feminist Analysis of Erykah Badu, Beyoncé Knowles, Nicki Minaj, and Janelle Monae", thesis submitted to the University of Southern Mississippi on 18 May 2014, page 21:
    For example, there are many themes of misogynoir, an “anti-Black misogyny where black women are the most degraded and placed at the bottom,” in mainstream rap music (groupthink 2013).
  • 2014, Monica Cruz, "Someone Tell Kanye West to Stop Insulting Black Women", The Paper (Fordham University), Volume 43, Issue 6, 24 September 2014, page 9:
    Unfortunately, the idealization of white women is most often paired with the condemnation of black women, creating the intersectional problem of misogynoir: the combined racism and sexism black women face.
  • 2014, Monika MHz, "When We Talk About Violence, We Can't Isolate It", PQ Monthly, Volume 3, Issue 10, October/November 2014, page 31:
    I have no doubt that the high rates of violence seen in our community has a correlative tie to whorephobia, ableism, anti-homeless bias, misogyny and misogynoir []
  • 2014, Mysia Anderson, "'Cops and Robbers'", The Stanford Daily (Standford University), 12 November 2014:
    With no mention of the trauma that accompanies such abuse it’s clear that the play’s misogynoir had purely instrumental value.
  • 2014, Subhanya Sivajothy, "Confronting misogynoir in popular media", The McGill Daily/Le Délit (McGill University), Volume 104, Issue 13, 24 November 2014, page 9:
    Attended by about 200 students, many of whom were people of colour, the event featured the screening of music videos as well as a discussion focused on black feminism and “misogynoir,” a term coined by queer black feminist Moya Bailey that refers to anti-black misogyny.
  • 2015, Treva B. Lindsey, "Let Me Blow Your Mind: Hip Hop Feminist Futures in Theory and Praxis", Urban Education, Volume 50, Number 1, January 2015, pages 57-58:
    Drawing upon a history in which racism, heteropatriarchy, and inter-racial gender ideology rendered Black women invisible and marginalized, Pough compels Black feminists attempting to reject hip-hop feminism to revisit the historical record of Black women pushing back against Black male sexism and misogynoir in Black political, cultural, and social spaces.
  • 2015, Trice Edney, "Magazine names 'Fiercest Sisters' of 2014", Daytona Times, Year 40, Number 2, 8 January 2015 - 14 January 2015, page 8:
    She defends Black women against "misogynoir."
  • 2020 October 9, Maggie Astor, “Kamala Harris and the ‘Double Bind’ of Racism and Sexism”, in New York Times[1]:
    “These are distinctly misogynoir tactics,” Dr. Brown said, referring to the combination of racism and sexism that Black women face.