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Essay-Review: Injustice, Black Girls and Black Women - by Patricia Williams, Professor of Law and Renowned Author

Essay-Review: Injustice, Black Girls and Black Women - by Patricia Williams, Professor of Law and Renowned Author | Fabulous Feminism | Scoop.it

Patricia Williams writes about the particular combination of racism and sexism that black women and girls endure. In her lead essay, Williams considers how African American women have their individuality effaced by crude and derogatory typologies, and how the justice system accords them less credence than their white peers, while disproportionately criminalizing and imprisoning them. 


Williams writes of the police brutality black girls face, even in their own schools, the sexualization and objectification to which they are subjected, the inner lives that are ignored, and the narratives into which they are co-opted. "How does anyone survive having been marked with the trope of un-life?", she asks. "Is there a path to vivacity from being captured and captioned as the object of others' beliefs?"

bobbygw's insight:
Patricia Williams is the James L. Dohr Professor of Law at Columbia Law School. She has served on the faculties of the University of Wisconsin School of Law, City University of New York Law School, and Golden Gate University School of Law. Williams was a fellow at the School of Criticism and Theory, Dartmouth College, as well as at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. 

Her books include The Alchemy of Race and Rights; The Rooster's Egg; and Seeing a ColorBlind Future: The Paradox of Race. Williams has also been a columnist for The Nation. Williams was a MacArthur fellow, and served on the board of trustees at Wellesley College. She earned her J.D. from Harvard Law School in 1975 and her B.A. from Wellesley College in 1972.

Williams practiced as deputy city attorney for the Office of the Los Angeles City Attorney and as staff lawyer for the Western Center on Law and Poverty. She is published widely in the areas of race, gender, and law, and on other issues of legal theory and legal writing. 


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46 Books By Women of Color to Read in 2018

46 Books By Women of Color to Read in 2018 | Fabulous Feminism | Scoop.it
Someday we’ll have a 46th president, but until then, here are 46 other things to look forward to
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Invisible No More – Police Violence Against Black Women and Women of Color

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These Black Women Owned 2017

These Black Women Owned 2017 | Fabulous Feminism | Scoop.it
Author Jesmyn Ward hit the “nerd lottery” this year when she was awarded a MacArthur “genius” grant. She was one of 24 people honored by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation with a $625,000 prize. Ward, who wrote the award-winning novels Salvage the Bones and Sing, Unburied, Sing as well as the James Baldwin-inspired essay collection The Fire This Time, teaches at Tulane University in New Orleans and lives in her home state of Mississippi.
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Race, Media, and Black Womanhood in the Early Twentieth Century

Race, Media, and Black Womanhood in the Early Twentieth Century | Fabulous Feminism | Scoop.it
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