Troubles in interracial talk about discipline: An examination of African American child rearing narratives

Citation
L. Mosby et al., Troubles in interracial talk about discipline: An examination of African American child rearing narratives, J COMP FAM, 30(3), 1999, pp. 489
Citations number
73
Categorie Soggetti
Sociology & Antropology
Journal title
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE FAMILY STUDIES
ISSN journal
00472328 → ACNP
Volume
30
Issue
3
Year of publication
1999
Database
ISI
SICI code
0047-2328(199922)30:3<489:TIITAD>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
The preference of African American parents for physical discipline is noted frequently in the literature, and it is suggested that this preference is responsible for the over representation of black children in foster care. O ur research has found that African American parents in a social service int ervention program clearly express this preference to their social workers, thereby further jeopardizing their chances of being judged fit parents. Stu dies of African American parenting styles show that there is a preference f or physical discipline in combination with loving verbal reinforcement. Thi s preference seems to represent a deep-seated set of cultural beliefs that cross many generations in the African American community. In spite of the i mportance of these claims, however, and the apparent cultural character of the preferences, there are relatively few studies of the African American u se of physical discipline and none that report on the preference in any det ail. This paper examines extended narrative accounts of why physical punish ment is a preferred form of discipline in the African American community an d how it is ideally to be used. Because the preference for physical discipl ine is thought to be a deep seated cultural form, and culture is often conv eyed through narrative, we have paid careful attention to narrative in exam ining this preference.