The Portrayal of African American Women in Recent Films

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The portrayal of African American women in recent films, has served to highlight the negative stereotyping against them and increase awareness to their plight. The negative stereotyping occurred before the passing of the Thirteenth Amendment, where African Americans were predominantly bought and sold as slaves. It is only after the passing of the amendment and the Civil Rights Act, were African Americans considered citizens of the United States, granted the opportunity to vote and had the right for equal treatment. As such, this allowed for the empowerment of African American women, allowing them the opportunity of more work options and given the freedom of decision-making. However, the negativity that skin colour represented in the past still pervades, hence, film has become a platform for the exposure of the oppression and restrictions faced by women of colour, and allow for the exploration of the disadvantages that plague them. This has brought about revisionism (Barbu, 2011), which has granted African American women with more compassionate views, as compared to their white counterparts. Although the oppression of African American women are brought to light, their ultimate empowerment is not shown, leaving the audience to question their future. The pursuit and glorification of the “white standard of beauty” (Patton, 2006, p. 24) by African American women in film, highlights the insecurity and stigmatization they face due to their colour. This desire to look like models on billboards and magazines, has drove them to peruse the shelves of beauty products, undergo plastic surgery and skin bleaching in order to have lighter skin. The mismatch between the comparisons of their black physiques against white ideal body shapes, has resu... ... middle of paper ... ...works for african american women. New Directions for Student Services, 2003(104), 19-27. doi:10.1002/ss.104 Hudson, S. V. (1998). Re-creational television: The paradox of change and continuity within stereotypical iconography.Sociological Inquiry, 68(2), 242-257. doi:10.1111/j.1475-682X.1998.tb00464.x Jarman, M. (2012). Cultural consumption and rejection of precious jones: Pushing disability into the discussion of sapphire's push and lee daniels's precious. Feminist Formations, 24(2), 163-185. Patton, T. O. (2006). Hey girl, am I more than my hair?: African american women and their struggles with beauty, body image, and hair. NWSA Journal, 18(2), 24-51. doi:10.1353/nwsa.2006.0037 Taylor, T. (Director) (2011). The help [Motion Picture]. United States: Touchstone Studios. Yuval-Davis, N. (1994). Women, ethnicity and empowerment. Feminism & Psychology, 4(1), 179-197.

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