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1998
DOI: 10.1111/1468-0424.00099
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Gender, Race, and Rumours: Re‐examining the 1943 Race Riots

Abstract: Focusing on three riots of the World War II era – those of Beaumont (Texas), Detroit, and New York's Harlem – this essay examines the rumours that sparked these disturbances to uncover the gendered ideologies that underlie racial violence. In these rumour narratives, women appear as either rape victims or tortured mothers, while men appear as either depraved rapists or noble protectors. The deployment of these images helped forge a defensive collective identity that facilitated the outbreak of violence. Becaus… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…For instance, white people benefit from racist legislations imposed upon people of colour because it allows them to maintain their power, privilege, and supremacy within society (Razack & Jeffery, 2002). Furthermore, such policies are met with little resistance from white individuals because it is used to increase their material and psychological conditions (Johnson, 2015). In essence, CRT calls for the deep critique of whiteness and its role in perpetuating institutionalized power relations and racial hierarchies.…”
Section: Critical Race Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, white people benefit from racist legislations imposed upon people of colour because it allows them to maintain their power, privilege, and supremacy within society (Razack & Jeffery, 2002). Furthermore, such policies are met with little resistance from white individuals because it is used to increase their material and psychological conditions (Johnson, 2015). In essence, CRT calls for the deep critique of whiteness and its role in perpetuating institutionalized power relations and racial hierarchies.…”
Section: Critical Race Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Existing research on the historical role of rumours has called attention to the intersection of gender and race in their use, referring to notions of family and other gendered narratives that sparked outbreaks of violence during racial disturbances (Johnson 1998 ). Examining race riots in the twentieth-century United States, historian Marilynn S. Johnson has argued that understanding how race and gender are in a “mutually constitutive relationship” in rumours helps us understand “why riots occurred the way they did” and what the difference was between men and women’s participation in such violent actions (Johnson 1998 , 253, 272). In the context of antisemitic violence in rural Hungary during World War One, the widespread stereotype about Jews murdering Christian children resulted in violent attacks against Jewish merchants.…”
Section: Violating Gendered Norms Of Behaviour: Women Rioters’ Repert...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Wells, Marie‐Joseph Angélique, and Harriet Tubman are amongst countless Black women across the African Diaspora who spoke to both their gender and racial identity when challenging oppressive forces (Smith, 1985). Johnson (2015) pointed to the anti‐slavery movement led by Black women abolitionists as the origin of Black feminism. Rather than emerging in the 1960s and 1970s, Black feminism re emerged (Johnson, 2015).…”
Section: Black Feminism the Home And Black Women's Geographiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Johnson (2015) pointed to the anti‐slavery movement led by Black women abolitionists as the origin of Black feminism. Rather than emerging in the 1960s and 1970s, Black feminism re emerged (Johnson, 2015).…”
Section: Black Feminism the Home And Black Women's Geographiesmentioning
confidence: 99%