Doing the Lynch Tango: White Women, Black Men, and Racial Privilege

Authors

  • Robin Parker Beyond Diversity Resource Center

Abstract

Contentious and distrustful interactions among black men and white women are not inevitably the product of the independent actions and intentions of the persons involved. Cultural narratives, which have long ascribed savage and bestial characteristics to black men, and passive and chaste characteristics to white women, shape modern-day interactions among the two groups and influence attitudes held in the wider society. Examination of cultural narratives offers an opportunity to better understand the sociological mechanisms that support racism and racial privilege, and to recast relationships that often have been rendered toxic by a potent but usually invisible ideology.

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How to Cite

Parker, R. (2014). Doing the Lynch Tango: White Women, Black Men, and Racial Privilege. Reflections: Narratives of Professional Helping, 16(1), 126–132. Retrieved from https://reflectionsnarrativesofprofessionalhelping.org/index.php/Reflections/article/view/801

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General Submissions