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Cultivating supportive, professional relationships among black women in educational leadership: shattering the mirror of self-destructionUnknown Date (has links)
Although current employment statistics paint a promising picture for women in general, they fail to address both the multitude of challenges women face in their attempt to secure leadership positions or in their ability to gain and maintain support from their female colleagues. Black women, in particular, tend to be torn between their fabled image to others in the organization and their official duties and responsibilities at work. This paper discusses definitions and conceptual uses of horizontal and vertical violence by Black female educational leaders ; problematizes the phenomenon as outlined by Freire (1970) at the theoretical level ; outlines the proposed qualitative methods, which will be used to investigate the phenomenon further ; and taking Paulo Freire's lead, explores the implications of sabotage or violence coming from members of the same minority group. In this specific case, Black female educational leaders will serve as the primary participants of the study. Once the data is collected and analyzed, the paper will include an analysis of the data and a discussion of the findings followed by recommendations based on the findings of the study. / by Dildra Martin-Ogburn. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2012. / Includes bibliography. / Electronic reproduction. Boca Raton, Fla., 2012. Mode of access: World Wide Web.
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The mixed-race girl’s guide to the art of passing: racial simulations in Danzy Senna’s Caucasia and Nella Larsen’s QuicksandUnknown Date (has links)
Racial identifications are continually influenced by and constructed through
one’s environment. Building on Jean Baudrillard’s “The Precession of Simulacra” and
Gaston Bachelard’s The Poetics of Space, this thesis argues that houses and clothing are
the material objects that allow characters Birdie Lee from Danzy Senna’s Caucasia and
Helga Crane from Nella Larsen’s Quicksand to construct their mixed race identities.
Birdie Lee’s childhood home is the place where she develops a mixed race identity.
When she leaves that home, she is forced to take on simulacra in order to pass for white.
Without a stable childhood or adult home, Helga Crane’s wardrobe becomes the space
where she unconsciously develops a mixed race identity. Her clothing choices allow her
to simulate an entirely black identity that masks her mixed race heritage. Ultimately, the
fates of Birdie and Helga are determined by whether or not they can occupy a space that
is accepting of their mixed race identities. / Includes bibliography. / Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2014. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
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Reconstructing identity in post-colonial black South African literature from selected novels of Sindiwe Magona and Kopano MatlwaMontle, Malesela Edward January 2018 (has links)
Thesis (M. A. (English Studies)) --University of Limpopo, 2018 / This study seeks to examine the concept of identity in the post-colonial South Africa. Like
any other African state, South Africa was governed by a colonial strategy called apartheid
which meted out harsh conditions on black people. However, the indomitable system of
apartheid was subdued by the leadership of the people, which is democracy in 1994.
Notwithstanding the dispensation of democracy, colonial legacies such as inequality,
racial discrimination and poverty are still yet to be addressed. As mirrored in Sindiwe
Magona’s Beauty’s Gift (2008) and Mother to Mother (1998) and Kopano Matlwa’s
Coconut (2008) and Spilt Milk (2010), the colonial past perhaps paved a way for social
issues to warm their way into the democratic South Africa. This study will use the
aforementioned novels penned in the post-colonial period to present an evocation of
identity-crisis in South Africa. It will then employ these methodological approaches;
Afrocentricity, Feminism, Historical-biographical and Post-Colonial Theory to assert and
re-assert the identity that South Africans have acquired subsequent to the political
transition from apartheid to democracy.
KEY WORDS: Apartheid, Colonialism, Democracy, Identity, Post-Colonialism
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The Stories We Tell: A Qualitative Inquiry to Multiracial Family StorytellingThomas, Mariko O. 06 November 2014 (has links)
A narrative inheritance is comprised of the stories told by family members that are received by a younger generation and used to help construct identity. According to the communication theory of identity, identity is formed through communication. Additionally, the storied resource perspective looks at narratives as a major method of creating and maintaining identity. This study looks at the kinds of narrative inheritance concerning race that people in multiracial families receive and possible ways it affects racial identity formation. Findings from 12 semi-structured interviews indicate that narratives of racism, cultural pride, and hardship are prevalent in multiracial families. Additionally, findings show that varying family structures may affect the transference of racial narratives between generations, which can in turn affect how multiracial children choose to identify themselves racially.
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A yard to sweep : race, gender, and the enslaved landscapeBattle, Whitney Lutricia, 1971- 01 August 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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Ethnicity as identity and ethnicity politically mobilised : symbols of mobilisation in Inkatha.Mare, Gerhard. January 1995 (has links)
This thesis. entitled 'ETHNICITY AS IDENTITY AND ETHNICITY POLITICALLY
MOBILISED: SYMBOLS OF MOBILISATION IN INKATHA'. presents two major
contributions. The first is a discussion of ethnicity that not only draws the distinction
between the phenomenon in its mobilised political form. on the one hand. and on the
other ethnicity as social identity presenting life stories through which individuals live
part of their social existences. but also follows through the theoretical and policy
implications. The implications of this distinction suggest ways in which the issue of
-ethnicity can be approached within attempts to avoid the conflictual dimension. The
second is a study of the manner in which political mobilisation of Zulu ethnicity has
occurred. especially during the 19708 and 1980s. through the Inkatha movement. The
case study effectively illustrates the manner in which politicised ethnicity functions. in
defining a rigid interpretation that allows little flux and movement within. and from
and into the ethnic camp.
The author integrates the theoretical discussion of the issue of ethnicity and ethnic
social identities with comparative and empilrical material drawn nationally and
internationally as well as from the extensive cue study of the mobilisation practices of
the Inkatha movement and its leadership. In the theoretical approach the complex
nature of all identities. and of ethnicity specifically, is stressed, arguing for the
multiple experiences of what is presented as homogeneous within ethnic mobilisation.
Ethnic identities are gendered, and subject to the effects of class, age, and 'race'
distinctions. Ethnicity is, furthermore, much more flexible than would appear to be
the case from such mobilisation. It is in this flexibility that an approach to resolving
'ethnic conflict' lies.
Within ethnic mobilisation the stress in the interpellations addressed at ethnic
subjects is on rigidity, lnflexibility, and single and centralised interpretations. These
elements are illustrated through the case study of Inkatha operating from within the
previous KwaZulu bantustan. Themes and approaches within the discourse of
mobilisation employed to mobilise a regional population into Inkatha are examined.
and set against the background and effects of social, political and economic factors. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1995.
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An emerging black identity in contemporary South Africa.Mtose, Xoliswa Antoinette. January 2008 (has links)
This study aims to understand emerging black identities in contemporary South Africa. The focus is on the impact the radical transformation of the political and social system in South Africa is having on black identity. This study emphasises two key ideas: possibilities for the construction of black identity and the significance of apartheid on black identity, and how these two factors have impacted on the construction of black identity. A reflection on the work of Biko (1978) is used as the key theoretical framework for this study to understand the construction of black identity in the process of encounter with whiteness and encounter with racism. In this thesis, black people‟s autobiographies have been studied as a site where shared images of the past are actively produced and circulated: a site where a collective engagement with the past is both reflected and constructed. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2008.
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Understanding whiteness in South Africa with specific reference to the art of Brett Murray.Passmoor, Ross P. January 2009 (has links)
The white male artist whose self-interrogation attaches to his whiteness, difference and former centrality, inevitably exposes himself to the critical scrutiny of current discourse on race and whiteness studies. In this dissertation I examine the concept and emergence of whiteness as a dominant construct in select socio-historical contexts, more particularly in the colonial sphere. While colonial whiteness has often failed to acknowledge or foreground the faceted nature of its composition, this became particularly marked in a South African context with polarisation in the political, cultural and linguistic spheres. However in encounters with the colonised, unifying pretensions of whiteness prevailed, reinforcing difference along racial lines. I examine the work of white South African male artist Brett Murray, in which the interrogation of whiteness and associated marginalization and invisibility is again foregrounded, but predominantly in a postcolonial context. As Murray cautiously navigates his satirical gaze at the culturally and conceptually flawed hybridity of South African (male) whiteness, he inadvertently exposes a nostalgic gaze at erstwhile racial centrality. I further consider whether as a postcolonial other Murray has in fact been able to transcend racially based self-interrogation by addressing more polemic issues associated with power, corruption and inhumanity that transcend race. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2009.
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White racial identity : its relationship to cognitive complexity and interracial contactLook, Christine T. January 1997 (has links)
This study was conducted in two parts. In the first part, two assumptions presented in Janet Helms' White Racial Identity (WRI) development model (1990) were tested. First, Helms theorized that one's stage of WRI development is positively related to increased cognitive complexity achievement and suggests that later stages require greater complexity. A second assumption of Helms' theory was that continued interracial contact is essential for advancement in WRI stage development. Part one of this study examined the relationship of cognitive complexity and interracial contact (both formal and informal) to WRI, and the relationship between cognitive complexity and interracial contact as they relate to WRI.Part two of this study consisted of a factor analysis of Helms' WRI measure followed by a second set of analyses examining the relationship between the new obtained factors with contact and cognitive complexity. This analysis allowed a comparison to be made between Helms' 5 WRI stages and the obtained factor solution from the factor analysis. It also allowed a comparison of the relationship between the stages and cognitive complexity and contact and the obtained factor solution and these same variables.Three hundred and sixty eight White undergraduates completed Helms' White Racial Identity Attitude Scale, a 4 x 6 Repertory Grid, measuring cognitive complexity in social settings, and an interracial contact measure, including a measure of both formal and informal types of contact. Results of part one of the analyses indicated that neither cognitive complexity nor cognitive complexity x contact were significantly related to WRI scores. However, contact was significantly related to WRI scores. WRI stage two was positively related and WRI stage four was negatively related to scores on formal contact. Stage 4 was negatively related and stages 2 and 3 were positively related to scores on informal contact.The results of part two indicated again that neither cognitive complexity nor cognitive complexity x contact were significantly related to the obtained WRI factors. However, contact once again was significant. The factor analysis produced a 5 factor solution that while similar in theme and number to the 5 stages, nonetheless indicated a different relationship with contact scores than the stages did. Factor 3 (representing stage 4) was positively related and factor 4 (representing stages 2 and 3) was negatively related to formal contact scores. However, factor 3 (representing stage 4) was positively related and factor 4 (representing stages 2 and 3) were negatively related to scores on informal contact. There were discrepancies across the two parts of the study as to the stages and direction of the relationships between interracial contact (formal and informal) and WRI scores. Some of these results were in opposite directions than either the theory or study expected.These discrepancies are dealt with in chapter 5. / Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services
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Role models and racial identity for African American males at historically black and predominantly white colleges and universities / Title on signature form: Role models and racial identity of African American males at historically black and predominantly white colleges and universities / Characteristics of role modelsCarey, Kory L. 21 July 2012 (has links)
The current study investigated role model selection and racial identity for 104 African
American male college students attending historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs)and predominantly White institutions (PWIs). Participants completed a demographic
questionnaire, a role model measure, and a racial identity measure. Data were analyzed both quantitatively and qualitatively and findings revealed that 82% of participants identified role models with 92% identifying racially-similar role models. Qualitative analysis using open and axial coding methods yielded 11 themes that allowed for a closer look into the characteristics African American male college students identified as important in role models: Personality
Attributes, Community, Success, Spirituality, Providing Inspiration or Challenge, Mentorship, Education, Family, Emotional Support, Shared Career Interest, and Proximity. A discussion of the results with research and applied implications are included. / Department of Counseling Psychology and Guidance Services
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