奴役的故事

Cati Coe
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在新泽西州北部和华盛顿特区的大多数非洲研究参与者都讲述了他们的出生地或黑人身份被用来对付他们的故意羞辱或贬低的故事。通过这些互动和关于这些互动的故事,非洲护理工作者逐渐熟悉了美国的种族分类,其中他们是黑人,混杂着非洲人是非人类的刻板印象,以及移民从公民那里抢走工作的刻板印象。这些侮辱将他们纳入了美国的种族类别,如“黑人”和“有色人种”,这些人的社会类别在他们的祖国几乎没有意义。因此,非洲护工对非洲裔美国人的经历变得更加敏感。护理人员把种族主义的故事作为他们在美国经历的典范。
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Stories of Servitude
Most of the African research participants in northern New Jersey and the Washington DC metropolitan area told stories of deliberate humiliation or diminishment in which their place of origin or Blackness was used against them. Through these interactions and stories about these interactions, African care workers were becoming familiar with American racial categories, in which they were Black, mixed in with stereotypes about Africans as non-human and about immigrants stealing jobs from citizens. These insults incorporated them into American racial categories as “Blacks” and “people of color,” social categories of person that made little sense in their home countries. As a result, African care workers were becoming more sensitive to the experiences of African-Americans. Care workers take stories of racism to be paradigmatic of their experiences in the United States.
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Interlude Stories of Servitude Interlude Making and Breaking Practical Kinship “Anyone Who Is Not African”
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