Go Ask Mom: The Gendered Dynamics of Color-Conscious Racial Socialization among White Parents

Author:

Kincaid Reilly1ORCID,Underhill Megan R2

Affiliation:

1. Purdue University , USA

2. University of North Carolina Asheville , USA

Abstract

Abstract While most white parents avoid discussing race and racism with their children or tell them to be color-blind, recent research suggests that a growing number of color-conscious white parents intentionally talk with their children about racism as an ongoing, systemic issue. However, this research gives little attention to parents’ gender. Using interviews with 28 color-conscious white heterosexual parents, we examine how and why gender influences parents’ race-related conversations with their children. We show that, in theory, mothers and fathers share similar beliefs about race/racism and the need to discuss it with their children. In practice, however, mothers overwhelmingly shoulder these conversations. We trace this paradox back to mothers’ distinctively color-conscious refashioning of intensive mothering practices—which involves both personal and community-level work at the race-parenting intersection—that fathers do not undertake. This gender gap in parents’ personal/community work around race influences contrasting approaches to race-related conversations with their children, with mothers being more proactive and fathers being more passive. This dynamic ultimately casts race as a “Mom topic” within color-conscious white families. We argue that this can inhibit more egalitarian realizations of color-conscious white racial socialization and carries important implications for the sustainability and outcomes of these efforts.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference38 articles.

1. “Socialization of Racial Ideology by White Parents.”;Abaied;Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology,2021

2. “Black Lives, White Kids: White Parenting Practices Following Black-Led Protests.”;Anoll;Perspectives on Politics,2022

3. “In Blind Pursuit of Racial Equality?”;Apfelbaum;Psychological Science,2010

4. “White Parents’ Socialization of Racial Attitudes: A Commentary on Scott et al. (2020).”;Bigler;Perspectives on Psychological Science,2022

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