Knowing What We Know
288 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:06 Sep 2005
ISBN:9780813536606
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Knowing What We Know

African American Women's Experiences of Violence and Violation

Rutgers University Press

In recent years there has been an attempt by activists, service providers, and feminists to think about violence against women in more inclusive ways. In Knowing What We Know, activist and sociologist Gail Garfield argues that this effort has not gone far enough and that in order to understand violence, we must take the lived experiences of African American women seriously.  Doing so, she cautions, goes far beyond simply adding voices of black women to existing academic and activist discourses, but rather, requires a radical shift in our knowledge of these women’s lives and the rhetoric used to describe them.

Bringing together a series of life-history interviews with nine women, this unique study urges a departure from established approaches that position women as victims of exclusively male violence. Instead, Garfield explores what happens when women’s ability to make decisions and act upon those choices comes into conflict with cultural and social constraints. Chapters explore how women experience racialized or class-based violence, how these forms of violence are related to gendered violence, and what these violations mean to a woman’s sense of identity. By showing how women maintain, sustain, and in some instances regain their sense of human worth as a result of their experiences of violation, Garfield complicates the existing dialogue on violence against women in new and important ways.

[cut middle sentence if necessary]Knowing What We Know offers readers a rare and valuable opportunity to travel with African American women as they move through the emotional and bureaucratic maze that surrounds their experiences of violence and victimization. Their stories are deeply moving and Gail Garfield's analysis is very compelling. This is a very important book with a refreshing point of view about how race and gender intersect in complicated ways. Beth E. Richie, author of Compelled to Crime
This work makes its own distinctive contribution to feminist literature on the violence against women. The author includes riveting accounts about the lives of nine African American women and emphasizes differing forms of 'violation and violence' that they have experienced. Traci West, author of Wounds of the Spirit: Black Women, Violence, and Resistance Ethics
Gail Garfield is an associate professor of sociology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York.
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