12 Quotes by Melissa V. Harris-Perry
- Author Melissa V. Harris-Perry
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Loss of social standing is an ever-present threat for individuals whose social acceptance is based on behavioral traits rather than unconditional human value.
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- Author Melissa V. Harris-Perry
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Citizenship is more than an individual exchange of freedoms for rights; it is also membership in a body politic, a nation, and a community. To be deemed fair, a system must offer its citizens equal opportunities for public recognition, and groups cannot systematically suffer from misrecognition in the form of stereotype and stigma.
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- Author Melissa V. Harris-Perry
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Women were expected to sit in the pews, receiving messages from men in the pulpit. Their role was to recognize God in their pastor, not to expect or demand that he recognize God in them.
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- Author Melissa V. Harris-Perry
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Sisters can sometimes get their way by confirming the expectation that they are threatening and angry, but doing so may leave them feeling that they have not truly been heard at all.
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- Author Melissa V. Harris-Perry
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The mythology of black women as promiscuous was important to maintaining the profitable exploitation of slave society. In freedom, it remained important as a means of racial and gender control.
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- Author Melissa V. Harris-Perry
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Individuals from disempowered social groups desire recognition for their group but also want recognition of their distinctiveness from the group.18.
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Their anger is not experienced as a psychological reality but is seen through an ideology that distorts black women’s lived experiences.
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- Author Melissa V. Harris-Perry
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A person or group of people can suffer real damage, real distortion, if the people or society around them mirror back to them a confining or demeaning or contemptible picture of themselves.”24.
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- Author Melissa V. Harris-Perry
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To be a person of relative power and privilege viewing a person of less power and privilege is a political act. The gaze of the powerful is neither neutral nor benign; misrecognition hinders the ability of black people to act as citizens. Indeed, hooks asserts, challenging white people’s assumptions about what they see when they view black people is a critical step toward liberation and equality.21.
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