Affiliation:
1. The Graduate Center, City University of New York, New York, NY 10016, USA
Abstract
This personal narrative is a critical reflection and affirmation letter to Black women. Throughout this commentary, at the end of each section, I have included what I call “gems”. I hope they serve as a manifesto for our collective healing from working in institutions that center on the ideologies and practices of dominance. This piece particularly focuses on the dominant ideology and practice of “whiteness” within institutions as a surveillance tool through policy that directly impacts Black women’s wellbeing through gender anti-black racism. Through storytelling and drawing on Black feminist scholarship, this narrative exposes the challenges I faced with institutional policies and practices as I pursued my career in both academia and social service work. Throughout this narrative, I highlight how the undercurrent of whiteness is embedded in the foundation of institutional policy and practices. This narrative serves as a demand for institutional accountability and reckoning with the coloniality of epistemology and ontology. There is a great emotional toll for Black women who are confronting and resisting gendered anti-black racism with deep internal struggles and triumphs. The violent institutional practices seek to eclipse Black women’s ability to dream, imagine and create. Whiteness is centered in institutional infrastructure, serves as a distraction, and impedes our ability to conceptualize the world we desire. We deserve to have imagination in our work. This narrative is a reflection of the harm of whiteness, a guide for Black women academics, a manifesto for change, and a testament to our humanity.
Reference22 articles.
1. The psychosis of whiteness: The celluloid hallucinations of “Amazing Grace” and “Belle”;Andrews;Journal of Black Studies,2016
2. Brown, Tyese A. (2023). A Blackgirl Artivisionary Mosaic: Art-Based Participatory Refusals to School Punishment. [Doctoral dissertation, City University of New York].
3. Radical Acceptance and Obesity-Related Health Conditions: A Case Report;Burton;Journal of Clinical Psychology in Medical Settings,2020
4. Collins, Patricia Hill (2000). Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment, Routledge.
5. Does anyone care about Black women?;Cooper;Meridians,2014