Social Rhetoric and Black Motherhood

In this article, historical womanist theory, which situates Black women as a unique racialized and gendered laboring class in the United States, is empirically validated through testing of several key fundamental assumptions of the theory. This research identifies ways in which images of Black women’s reproduction and parenting are manipulated in order to justify ongoing regulation and dominance of Black labor: biological, reproductive, and productive through an analysis of popular film and policies that disproportionately impact Black women in the United States.

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Nicole Rousseau, PhD

Dr. Nicole Rousseau is a historical sociologist whose work examines how social rhetoric, media, and institutional structures shape identity, power, and lived experience.

She is the author of Black Woman’s Burden: Commodifying Black Reproduction and has published extensively on Black feminist thought, historical womanist theory, and structural inequality.

Dr. Rousseau has led research initiatives, taught at the university level, and worked with organizations to translate sociological insight into program strategy and institutional change.

She is also the host of The Architecture of Meaning, a podcast extending her research into a public-facing exploration of narrative, media, and power.

https://nicolerousseauphd.com
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