Black Girl Magic: Strength, Resiliency, and Suffering? A Qualitative Exploration of Toxic Black Femininity and Intimate Partner Violence

This phenomenological study explored the lived experiences of six Black women who survived Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) through the frameworks of Toxic Black Femininity (TBF), Post-Traumatic Slave Syndrome, and Intersectionality to understand how coping with ongoing systemic racism influences mea...

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Veröffentlicht in:Contemporary family therapy 2024-12, Vol.46 (4), p.385-398
Hauptverfasser: Kelly, Lorin, Vennum, Amber, Bell, Char’dae C.
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container_title Contemporary family therapy
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Vennum, Amber
Bell, Char’dae C.
description This phenomenological study explored the lived experiences of six Black women who survived Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) through the frameworks of Toxic Black Femininity (TBF), Post-Traumatic Slave Syndrome, and Intersectionality to understand how coping with ongoing systemic racism influences meaning making of IPV experiences and help-seeking behaviors. Participants discussed how narratives within Black families and churches influenced how they coped with the trauma symptoms resulting from their IPV victimization and navigate relationships now. Specifically, participants’ experience of TBF and associated adherence to racial and gendered norms and stereotypes showed up as: 1) a felt pressure to portray strength, 2) rationalize the abuse, 3) advocate for their partner’s needs but not their own, and 4) blame themselves for the abuse. Further, when participants sought help, they: 1) avoided actions that could lead to police involvement due to fear of police brutality against their male partners, 2) had their hurt minimized due to white expectations of Blackness, 3) heard narratives from family and religious systems that reinforced TBF and their decision to stay in the harmful relationship, and 4) turned their frustrations with the lack of helpful support systems into advocacy. These findings highlight the intergenerational transmission of survival skills and narratives that have been passed down to Black women since the time of slavery and how systemic racism and TBF keep these narratives in play.
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source Sociological Abstracts; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); SpringerLink Journals - AutoHoldings
subjects Advocacy
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Black people
Black white relations
Blame
Clinical Psychology
Coping
Domestic violence
Excessive force
Families & family life
Family
Femininity
Help seeking behavior
Intergenerational relationships
Intergenerational transmission
Intersectionality
Intimate partner violence
Narratives
Original Paper
Police
Police brutality
Psychological trauma
Psychology
Psychotherapy
Racial identity
Resilience
Slavery
Social Work
Sociology
Stereotypes
Support networks
Systemic racism
Trauma
Victimization
Women
title Black Girl Magic: Strength, Resiliency, and Suffering? A Qualitative Exploration of Toxic Black Femininity and Intimate Partner Violence
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