'I had a lot of black friends growing up that my father didn't know about': an exploration of white poor and working class female racism

Authors
Citation
L. Weis et J. Hall, 'I had a lot of black friends growing up that my father didn't know about': an exploration of white poor and working class female racism, J GEND STUD, 10(1), 2001, pp. 43-66
Citations number
35
Categorie Soggetti
Sociology & Antropology
Journal title
JOURNAL OF GENDER STUDIES
ISSN journal
09589236 → ACNP
Volume
10
Issue
1
Year of publication
2001
Pages
43 - 66
Database
ISI
SICI code
0958-9236(200103)10:1<43:'HALOB>2.0.ZU;2-7
Abstract
Here we pull together data drawn from three studies to probe the issue of w hite poor and working class female racism further than previous research ha s done. All three investigations are deep ethnographic portraits of men and women, boys and girls, in the urban north-east, spanning middle school thr ough young adulthood. In the first two studies, we present data gathered fr om men and boys and then suggest the relative absence of racialised discour se among girls and women. In the final study, we show how expressed racism similar to that of white working class men exists among a group of white po or middle school girls in a community centre, and we argue that the existen ce of this neighbourhood organisation, which serves a predominantly white c lientele, actually encourages the formation of racist attitudes while, at t he same time, offering a space wherein girls can begin to articulate their concerns about domestic violence in their communities. In this latter secti on, we probe further the potentially contradictory activities taking place in what Boyte and Evans (1992) call 'free spaces'.