Intersectionality in the American South

Funded through Support by the Mellon Foundation

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Bibliography

This page contains references to works on and using intersectionality.   Many of the references on this page came from and can be found at BlackFeminisms.com.  Other references and citations are found from a general examination of “intersectionality” online. 

This list will be updated as frequently as possible.  In no way will this list be completely comprehensive.  However, If you have any suggestions for items that should be included on this list and are not there, please do not hesitate to contact us.

Books

A

Acker, Joan. 2006. “Inequality Regimes: Gender, Class, and Race in Organizations.” Gender & Society 20(4):441–64.

Alexander-Floyd, N. G. 2010. “Critical Race Black Feminism: A Jurisprudence of Resistance and the Transformation of the Academy.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society.

Alexander-Floyd, Nikol G. 2012. “Disappearing Acts: Reclaiming Intersectionality in the Social Sciences in a Post-Black Feminist Era.” Feminist Formations 24(1):1–25.  

B

Bailey, Moya. 2013. “New Terms of Resistance: A Response to Zenzele Isoke.” Souls 15(4): 341–43.

Baker, Tamara A., Nicole T. Buchanan, Chivon A. Mingo, Rosalyn Roker, and Candace S. Brown. 2015. “Reconceptualizing Successful Aging among Black Women and the Relevance of the Strong Black Woman Archetype.” Gerontologist 55(1):51–57.

Balzer, Cassandra L. 2016. “Making the Movement Matter: Conceptualizing Social Movement Success and Its Relation to Participation.” 

Bejarano, Christina, Nadia E. Brown, Sarah Allen Gershon, and Celeste Montoya. “Shared identities: Intersectionality, linked fate, and perceptions of political candidates.” Political Research Quarterly 74, no. 4 (2021): 970-985.

Berridge, Susan and Laura Portwood-Stacer. 2015. “Feminism, Hashtags and Violence Against Women and Girls.” Feminist Media Studies 15(2):341–58.

Best, Rachel Kahn, Lauren B. Edelman, Linda Hamilton Krieger, and Scott R. Eliason. 2011. “Multiple Disadvantages: An Empirical Test of Intersectionality Theory in EEO Litigation.” Law & Society Review 45(4):991–1025. Retrieved October 18, 2016.

Blackwell, Maylei and Nadine Naber. 2002. “Intersectionality in an Era of Globalization: The Implications of the UN World Conference against Racism for Transnational Feminist Practices—A Conference Report.” Meridians 2(2):237–48.

Bonilla-Silva, Eduardo. 2015. “More than Prejudice: Restatement, Reflections, and New Directions in Critical Race Theory.” Sociology of Race and Ethnicity 1(1):73–87.

Bonilla-Silva, Eduardo, Victor Ray, Rose Buckelew, and Elizabeth Freeman. 2010. “Critical Race Theories , Colorism , and the Decade ’ S Research on Families of Color.” Journal of Marriage and Family 72(June):440–59.

Boylorn, Robin M. 2013. “Blackgirl Blogs, Auto/ethnography, and Crunk Feminism.” Liminalities: A Journal of Performance Studies 9(2):73–82.

Boylorn, Robin M. 2008. “As Seen on TV: An Autoethnographic Reflection on Race and Reality Television.” Critical Studies in Media Communication 25(4):413–33.

Brah, Avtar and Ann Phoenix. 2004. “Ain’t I A Woman? Revisiting Intersectionality.” Feminist Challenges: Crossing Boundaries 5(3):75–86.

Branch, Enobong Hannah. 2007. “The Creation Of Restricted Opportunity Due To The Intersection Of Race & Sex: Black Women In The Bottom Class.” Race, Gender, & Class 14(3):247–64.

Brock, André. 2016. “Critical Technocultural Discourse Analysis.” New Media & Society 1–19.

Brooks, Kinitra, Martin, Kameelah, & Simmons, Lakisha. (2021). Conjure Feminism: Toward a GenealogyHypatia, 36(3), 452-461. doi:10.1017/hyp.2021.43

Brooks, Kinitra and Kameelah Martin. “’I Used to be Your Sweet Mama’: Beyoncé at the Crossroads of Blues and Conjure in Lemonade.” The Lemonade Reader. Edited by Kinitra D. Brooks and Kameelah Martin. Routledge Press, 2019. pp. 202-214.

Brown, Melissa. 2017. “The Sociology of Antiracism in Black and White.” Sociology Compass 11(2):e12451.

Brown, Nadia E., and Danielle C. Lemi. “” Life for Me Ain’t Been No Crystal Stair”: Black Women Candidates and the Democratic Party.” BUL Rev. 100 (2020): 1613.

Brown, Nadia, and Sarah Allen Gershon. “Body politics.” Politics, Groups, and Identities 5.1 (2017): 1-3.

Brown, Nadia. ““It’s more than hair… that’s why you should care”: the politics of appearance for Black women state legislators.” Politics, Groups, and Identities 2.3 (2014): 295-312.

Brown, Nadia, and Kira Hudson Banks. “Black Women’s agenda setting in the Maryland state legislature.” Journal of African American Studies 18.2 (2014): 164-180.

Brown, Nadia E. “Political participation of women of color: An intersectional analysis.” Journal of Women, Politics & Policy 35.4 (2014): 315-348.

Brown, Nadia E. “Negotiating the insider/outsider status: Black feminist ethnography and legislative studies.” Journal of Feminist Scholarship 3.1 (2012): 19-34.

Browne, Irene and Joya Misra. 2003. “The Intersection of Gender and Race in the Labor Market.” Annual Review of Sociology 29 (1997): 487–513. 

C

Calhoun, Craig. 2008. “Foreword: Engaging Contradictions: Theory, Politics, and Methods of Activist Scholarship.” 

Carbado, Devon W. 2013. “Colorblind Intersectionality.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society. 38(4):811–45. 

Chatelain, Marcia and Kaavya Asoka. 2015. “Women and Black Lives Matter.” Dissent 62(3): 54–61.

Chesney-Lind, M. 2006. “Patriarchy, Crime, and Justice: Feminist Criminology in an Era of Backlash.” Feminist Criminology 1(1):6–26. 

Cho, Sumi, Kimberle Williams Crenshaw, and Leslie McCall. 2013. “Toward a Field of Intersectionality Studies: Theory, Applications, and Praxis.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 38(4):785–810. 

Chong, Natividad Gutiérrez. 2014. “Human Trafficking and Sex Industry: Does Ethnicity and Race Matter?” Journal of Intercultural Studies 35(2):196–213. 

Choo, Hae Yeon and Myra Marx Ferree. 2010. “Practicing Intersectionality in Sociological Research: A Critical Analysis of Inclusions , Interactions , and Institutions in the Study of Inequalities.” Sociological Theory 28(2):129–49.

Chun, Jennifer Jihye, George Lipsitz, and Young Shin. 2013. “Intersectionality as a Social Movement Strategy: Asian Immigrant Women Advocates.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 38(4):917–40. 

Clair, Robin Patric, Nadia E. Brown, Debbie S. Dougherty, Hannah K. Delemeester, Patricia Geist-Martin, William I. Gorden, Tyler Sorg, and Paaige K. Turner. “# MeToo, sexual harassment: an article, a forum, and a dream for the future.” Journal of Applied Communication Research (2019).

Collins, P. H. 1998. “It ’ S All in the Family: Intersections of Gender , Race , and Nation Stable.” Hypatia 13(3):62–82. 

Collins, Patricia Hill. 2010. “The New Politics of Community.” American Sociological Review 75(1):7–30. 

Collins, Patricia Hill. 2015. “Intersectionality’s Definitional Dilemmas.” Annual Review of  Sociology 41:1–20.

Collins, Patricia Hill. 2007. “Pushing the Boundaries or Business as Usual? Race, Class, and Gender Studies and Sociological Inquiry.” Sociology in America: A History 572–604.

Cooper, Brittney C. 2015. “Love No Limit: Towards a Black Feminist Future ( In Theory ).” The Black Scholar 45(4):7–21.

Cottom, Tressie McMillan. 2016. “Black CyberFeminism: Intersectionality, Institutions and Digital Sociology.” in Digital Sociologies, edited by J. Daniels, K. Gregory, and T. M.Cottom. Bristol: Policy Press.

Covarrubias, Alejandro. 2011. “Quantitative Intersectionality: A Critical Race Analysis of the Chicana/o Educational Pipeline.” Journal of Latinos and Education 10(2):86–105.

Crenshaw, Kimberle Williams. 1991. “Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality , Identity Politics, and Violence Against Women of Color.” Stanford Law Review 43(6):1241–99. 

Crenshaw, Kimberle Williams, Andrea J. Ritchie, Rachel Anspach, Rachel Gilmer, and Luke Harris. 2015. Say Her Name: Resisting Police Brutality Against Black Women. New York.

Cruz, Ariane. 2016. “Playing with the Politics of Perversion: Policing BDSM, Pornography, and Black Female Sexuality.” Souls 18(2–4):379–407. 

D

Daniels, Jessie. 2016. “The Trouble with White Feminism: Whiteness, Digital Feminism and the Intersectional Internet .’” in The Intersectional Internet, Section Two: Cultural Values in the Machine.

Davis, Kathy. 2008. “Intersectionality as Buzzword: A Sociology of Science Perspective on What Makes a Feminist Theory Successful.” Feminist Theory 9(1):67–85.

Denny, Kathleen E. n.d. “Workplace Evaluations of Parents by Race: Unraveling Perceptual Penalties and Premiums Kathleen E. Denny.” Pp. 1–52 in. 

Díaz, Sara P. 2016. “‘A Racial Trust’: Individualist, Eugenicist, and Capitalist Respectability in the Life of Roger Arliner Young.” Souls.

Dixon, Kitsy. 2014. “Feminist Online Identity: Analyzing the Presence of Hashtag Feminism.” Journal of Arts and Humanities 3(7):34–40. 

Donovan, Roxanne. A. and Lindsey. M. West. 2014. “Stress and Mental Health: Moderating Role of the Strong Black Woman Stereotype.” Journal of Black Psychology.

Drake, Jarrett M. 2016. “Liberatory Archives Towards Belonging and Believing Part 2 – On Archivy – Medium-1.” Medium. 

Dubrow, Joshua Kjerulf. 2008. “How Can We Account for Intersectionality in Quantitative Analysis of Survey Data? Empirical Illustration for Central and Eastern Europe.” Ask 17(17):85–100.

Dy, A. M., S. Marlow, and L. Martin. 2016. “A Web of Opportunity or the Same Old Story?  Women Digital Entrepreneurs and Intersectionality Theory.” Human Relations

E

Ender, Morten G., David E. Rohall, and Michael D. Matthews. 2015. “Intersecting Identities: Race, Military Affiliation, and Youth Attitudes towards War.” War & Society 34(3):230– 46. 

F

Fackler, Katharina M. 2016. “Ambivalent Frames: Rosa Parks and the Visual Grammar of  Respectability.” Souls 1v8(2–4):271–82. 

Falcón, Sylvanna M. 2012. “Transnational Feminism and Contextualized Intersectionality at the 2001 World Conference Against Racism.” Journal of Women’s History 24(4):99–120.

Fasula, Amy M., Monique Carry, and Kim S. Miller. 2014. “A Multidimensional Framework for  the Meanings of the Sexual Double Standard and Its Application for the Sexual Health of. Young Black Women in the U.S.” Journal of sex research 51(2):170–83.

Finley, Jessyka. 2016. “Raunch and Redress: Interrogating Pleasure in Black Women’s Stand-up Comedy.” The Journal of Popular Culture 49(4):780–98. 

G

Gershon, Sarah Allen, Celeste Montoya, Christina Bejarano, and Nadia Brown. “Intersectional linked fate and political representation.” Politics, Groups, and Identities 7, no. 3 (2019): 642-653.

Gilbert, Keon L. and Rashawn Ray. 2016. “Why Police Kill Black Males with Impunity: Applying Public Health Critical Race Praxis (PHCRP) to Address the Determinants of. Policing Behaviors and ‘Justifiable’ Homicides in the USA.” Journal of Urban Health. 93:122–40.
Gillborn, D. 2015. “Intersectionality, Critical Race Theory, and the Primacy of Racism: Race,  Class, Gender, and Disability in Education.” Qualitative Inquiry 21(3):277–87. 

Goff, Phillip Atiba, Margaret A. Thomas, and Matthew Christian Jackson. 2008. “‘Ain’t I a Woman?’: Towards an Intersectional Approach to Person Perception and Group-Based. Harms.” Sex Roles.

Golash-Boza, Tanya. 2016. “A Critical and Comprehensive Sociological Theory of Race and. Racism.” Sociology of Race and Ethnicity 2(2):129–41. 
Golder, Scott A. and Michael W. Macy. 2014. “Digital Footprints: Opportunities and Challenges.  for Online Social Research.” Annual Review of Sociology 40(1):129–52. 

Gosine, Kevin. 2012. “Accomplished Black North Americans and Antiracism Education: Towards Bridging a Seeming Divide.” Critical Sociology 38(5):707–21. 

Greene, KJ. 2008. “Intellectual Property at the Intersection of Race and Gender: Lady Sings the Blues.” American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy … 16(3):365–85. 

H

Hamilton, Laura and Elizabeth A. Armstrong. 2009. “Gendered Sexuality in Young Adulthood: Double Binds and Flawed Options.” Gender & Society 23(5):589–616. 
Hancock, Ange-Marie. 2007. “Intersectionality as a Normative and Empirical Paradigm.” Politics & Gender 3(2):41–45.

Hankivsky, O. and R. Cormier. 2010. “Intersectionality and Public Policy: Some Lessons from Existing Models.” Political Research Quarterly 64(1):217–29. 

Harnois, Catherine E. 2010. “Race, Gender, and the Black Women’s Standpoint.” Sociological Forum 25(1):68–85.

Harvey, Adia M. 2005. “Becoming Entrepreneurs.” Gender & Society 19(6):789–808. 

Henderson, Abney L. and Cheryl R. Rodriguez. 2014. “Four Women An Analysis of the Artistry of Black Women in the Black Arts Movement, 1960s-1980s.” University of South Florida.

Herring, Cedric and L. Henderson. 2012. “From Affirmative Action to Diversity: Toward a Critical Diversity Perspective.” Critical Sociology 38(5):629–43.

Howard, Judith A. 2000. “Social Pyschology of Identities.” Annual Review of Sociology 26:367–93. 

Hyde, Janet Shibley. 2014. “Gender Similarities and Differences.” Annual Review of Psychology 65(1):373–98.

I

Ifekwunigwe, Jayne O. 2004. “Recasting ‘Black Venus’ in the New African Diaspora.” Women’s Studies International Forum 27(4):397–412. 

Isoke, Zenzele. 2014. “Can’t I Be Seen? Can’t I Be Heard? Black Women Queering Politics in Newark.” Gender, Place & Culture 21(3):353–69. 

J

Jones, Angela. 2015. “For Black Models Scroll Down: Webcam Modeling and the Racialization of Erotic Labor.” Sexuality and Culture 19(4):776–99. 

Jones, Angela. 2015. “Sex Work in a Digital Era.” Sociology Compass.

Jonsson, Terese. 2016. “The Narrative Reproduction of White Feminist Racism.” Feminist Review 113.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia S. 2012. “Blogging at the Intersections: Black Women, Identity, and Lesbianism.” Politics & Gender 8(3):405–14.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2019. “Licking salt: A Black woman’s tale of betrayal, adversity and survival.” Feminist Formations, 31(1): 67-84.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2017. “Beyond the side eye: Black women’s ancestral anger as a liberatory practice.” Journal of Black Sexuality and Relationships, 4(1): 61-81.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2016. “Learning from the doers: Women of color AIDS service organizations and their understanding of intersectionality.” National Political Science Review, 18141-160.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2016. “Reflections on “The Difference that Difference Makes.” Politics, Gender and Identities. 1-3

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2014. “I ain’t your darn help: Black women as the help in intersectionality research.” National Political Science Review, 16: 19-30.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia and Wilson, Salida. 2014. “Talking” about gender while ignoring race and class: A discourse analysis of pay equity debates.” National Political Science Review, 16: 49-66.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2013. “Now you see me, now you don’t: My political fight against the invisibility of Black women in intersectionality research.” Politics, Gender and Identities, 1 (1): 101-109.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2012. “Blogging at the intersections: Black women, identity, and lesbianism.” Politics & Gender, 8: 405-414

Jordan-Zachery, Julia, and Seltzer, Richard. 2012. “Responses to affirmative action: Is there a question order affect?” The Social Science Journal, 49 (2): 119-126.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2008. “A declaration of war: An analysis of how the invisibility of Black women makes them targets of the War on Drugs.” Journal of Women, Politics & Policy, 29(2): 231-259.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2003. “The female bogeyman: Political implications of criminalizing Black women.” Souls: A Critical Journal of Black Politics, Culture, and Society, 5(2): 42-62.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2007. “Am I a Black woman or a woman who is Black? A few thoughts on the meaning of intersectionality.” Politics & Gender, 3(2): 254-263. 

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2014. “Black girlhood and “The Help”: Constructing Black girlhood in a “post” racial and “post” gender state.” In From Uncle Tom’s Cabin to the Help: Critical perspectives on white-authored narratives of Black life, edited by Claire Garcia, Vershawn A. Young and Charise Pimentel. (New York: Palgrave MacMillian). pp. 83-94.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2013. “Black women occupying the academy: Merging critical mothering and mentoring to survive and thrive.” In Laboring positions: Back women, mothering, and the academy, edited by Sekile Nzinga-Johnson. (Demeter Press Toronto, Canada). pp. 273-291

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2007. “The female bogeyman: Political implications of criminalizing Black women” (reprint). In Racializing justice, disenfranchising lives: The racism, criminal justice, and law reader, edited by Manning Marable, Ian Steinberg and Keesha Middlemass. (New York: Palgrave Macmillan). pp. 101-121

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2006. “The war on drugs and welfare policy: The impact of their intersection on Black women in urban America.” In The Black Urban Community, edited by Gayle T. Tate and Lewis A. Randolph, (New York: Palgrave/Macmillian). pp. 268-282.

K

Kalev, Alexandra. 2009. “Cracking the Glass Cages? Restructuring and Ascriptive Inequality at Work.” American Journal of Sociology 114(6):1591–1643. 

Kang, Sonia K. and Galen V Bodenhausen. 2015. “Multiple Identities in Social Perception and Interaction: Challenges and Opportunities.” Annual Review of Psychology 66:547–74.

Karkazis, Katrina, Laura Mamo, and Ugo Edu. 2016. “Keeping an Eye on Power in Maintaining Racial Oppression and Race-Based Violence.” The American Journal of Bioethics 16(4):  25–27. 

Kearl, Michelle Kelsey. 2015. “‘Is Gay the New Black?’: An Intersectional Perspective on Social Movement Rhetoric in California’s Proposition 8 Debate.” Communication & Critical/Cultural Studies 12(1):63–82. 

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “The labor of (re) reading plantation landscapes fungible (ly).” Antipode 48.4 (2016): 1022-1039.

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “One strike evictions, state space and the production of abject black female bodies.” Critical Sociology 36.1 (2010): 45-64.

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “Travels and Travails of Settler Colonialism in Queer Natal.” GLQ 27.3 (2021): 485-488.

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “Humans involved: Lurking in the lines of posthumanist flight.” Critical Ethnic Studies 3.1 (2017): 162-185.

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “Humans involved: Lurking in the lines of posthumanist flight.” Critical Ethnic Studies 3.1 (2017): 162-185.

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “Post-indentitarian and post-intersectional anxiety in the neoliberal corporate university.” Feminist Formations (2015): 114-138.

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “New World Grammars: The’Unthought’Black Discourses of Conquest.” Theory & Event 19.4 (2016).

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “Post-indentitarian and post-intersectional anxiety in the neoliberal corporate university.” Feminist Formations (2015): 114-138.

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “Black’Feminisms’ and Pessimism: Abolishing Moynihan’s Negro Family.” Theory & Event 21.1 (2018): 68-87.

Lethabo King, Tiffany. “Some Black feminist notes on Native feminisms and the flesh.” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 39.1 (2021): 9-15.

Knapp, Gudrun-Axeli. 2005. “Race, Class, Gender: Reclaiming Baggage in Fast Travelling Theories.” European Journal of Women’s Studies 12(3):249–65. 

L

Lake, Nadine. 2014. “Black Lesbian Bodies – Reflections on a Queer South African Archive.” Africa Insight 44(1):69–83.

Lee, Hedwig and Margaret Takako Hicken. 2016. “Death by a Thousand Cuts: The Health Implications of Black Respectability Politics.” Souls.

Lemi, Danielle Casarez, and Nadia E. Brown. “Melanin and curls: evaluation of Black women candidates.” Journal of Race, Ethnicity, and Politics 4.2 (2019): 259-296.

Lewis, Jioni A., Ruby Mendenhall, Stacy A. Harwood, and Margaret Browne Huntt. 2013.  “Coping with Gendered Racial Microaggressions among Black Women College. Students.” Journal of African American Studies 17(1):51–73.

Lewis, Mel Michelle. 2011. “Body of Knowledge: Black Queer Feminist Pedagogy, Praxis, and Embodied Text.” Journal of lesbian studies 15(1):49–57. 

Lomsky-Feder, Edna and Orna Sasson-Levy. 2015. “Serving the Army as Secretaries: Intersectionality, Multi-Level Contract and Subjective Experience of Citizenship.” British. Journal of Sociology 66(1):173–92.

M

Macias, K. 2015. “‘Sisters in the Collective Struggle’: Sounds of Silence and Reflections on the  Unspoken Assault on Black Females in Modern America.” Cultural Studies ↔ Critical. Methodologies 15(4):260–64. 

Macias, Kelly. 2015. “Tweeting Away Our Blues: An Interpretative Phenomenological Approach to Exploring Black Women ’ S Use of Social Media to Combat Misogynoir.” Nova Southeastern University. 

Mahler, Sarah J., Mayurakshi Chaudhuri, and Vrushali Patil. 2015. “Scaling Intersectionality:  Advancing Feminist Analysis of Transnational Families.” Sex Roles 73(3–4):100–112.

Martin, Kameelah. 2022.  “Black Feminist Voodoo Aesthetics, Conjure Feminism, and the Arts.” In the Black Fantastic. Edited by Ekow Eshun. London, UK: Thames & Hudson, 138-144.

Martin, Kameelah  2022.  “’A Consort of the Spirits’ or How to Cultivate Indigo, Conjured by Herself.” The Langston Hughes Review, Vol 28, No.1,  1-9.

Martin, Kameelah.   2018.  “Trans-disciplinary Orientations: Theory, Methodology, and Literature of the African Diaspora.” Africana Methodology: A Social Study of Research Triangulation and Metatheory on Africana Phenomenon. Edited by James L. Conyers, Jr. Cambridge Scholars Publishing,  pp. 121-142.

Martin, Kameelah.  2018.   “’What you Really Know ‘bout the Dirrrty South?’: Black Women & Spirit Work in the Southern Imagination.” Introduction to Graphic Novel Box of Bones: The Trouble I’ve Seen. Ayize Jama Everette and John Jennings. Greenbelt, MD: Rosarium Publishing.

Martin, Kameelah.  2017.  “Womanism.” American Literature in Transition, 1980-1990Quentin Miller, Editor. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press 42-53.

Martin, Kameelah  2013.  “Conjuring Up an Image: The African American Healing Woman in the Films of Julie Dash & Kasi Lemmons.” Race, Gender, & Identity: A Social Science Comparative Analysis of Africana Culture. Africana Studies Vol. 5. (Sept 2013):7-18. 

Martin, Kameelah. 2013. “Caroline’s Nightmare: The Skeleton Key as Visual Echo of Charles Chesnutt’s Conjure Tales.” College Language Association Journal 56.4 (June 2013): 298-313. 

Martin, Kameelah. 2013.  “Hoodoo Ladies and High Conjurers: New Directions for an Old Archetype.” Literary Expressions of African Spirituality. Eds. Elizabeth West and Carol Marsh-Lockett. Lanham, MD. Lexington Press. 119-144. 

Martin, Kameelah. 2013. “Rethinking Ishmael Reed: Neo-Hoodoo Womanist Text?” On the Aesthetic Legacy of Ishmael Reed: Contemporary Reassessments. Eds. Paul Kareem Tayyar and Sämi Ludwig. Huntington Beach, CA: World Parade Books. 108-128. (reprint)

Martin, Kameelah. 2012.  “Disney’s Tia Dalma: A Critical Interrogation of the ‘Imagineered’ Priestess.” Black Women, Gender, and Families. Vol. 6, no. 1 (Spring 2012): 97-122.

Martin, Kameelah. 2010. “Charles W. Chesnutt and the Legacy of The Conjure Woman.” Charles Waddell Chesnutt: Placing A Stamp on America. Ed. Mary B. Zeigler. Spec. issue of Studies in the Literary Imagination. 43.2 (Fall 2010): 15-30.

Martin, Kameelah. 2008.   “Rethinking Ishmael Reed’s Mumbo Jumbo: Neo-Hoodoo Womanist Text?” College Language Association Journal 52.2 (Dec. 2008) 111-131. Full text

Martin, Kameelah.  2008.  “Women and Voodoo: A Conversation with Jewell Parker Rhodes.” Serving the Spirits: Women and Voodoo in Literature and Popular Culture. Eds. Kim Wells and Kameelah Martin Samuel. Spec. issue of Women Writers: A Zine. (Aug. 2008).

Martin, Kameelah.  2008.  “Ansa, Tina McElroy.” African American National Biography. Vol. 1. Cambridge: Oxford University Press, 2008. 50-51.

Martin, Kameelah.  2008.  “Nunez, Elizabeth.” African American National Biography. Vol. 1. Cambridge: Oxford University Press, 2008. 172-173.

Martin, Kameelah. 2008. “Hip Hop Soap Box: Pullin’ the Race Card in Mos Def’s ‘Mr. Nigga’.” Revolutions of the Mind: Cultural Studies in the African Diaspora Project. Edited by Dionne Bennett and Candace Moore. Los Angeles: University of California Los Angeles CAAS Publications, 2003: 111-115.

May, Vivian M. 2014. “‘speaking into the Void’? Intersectionality Critiques and Epistemic Backlash.” Hypatia.

McCall, Leslie. 2005. “The Complexity of Intersectionality.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 30(3):1771–1800

Mccoy, Shane. 2015. “Reading the ‘ Outsider Within ’: Counter-Narratives of Human Rights in Black Women’s Fiction.” 103(103):56–70.

McLeod, Jane D., Edward J. Lawler, and Michael Schwalbe, eds. 2014. Handbook of the Social Psychology of Inequality. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands

Minta, Michael D., and Nadia E. Brown. “Intersecting interests: Gender, race, and congressional attention to women’s issues.” Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race 11.2 (2014): 253-272.

Mirza, Heidi Safia and Yasmin Gunaratnam. 2014. “‘the Branch on Which I Sit’: Reflections on Black British Feminism.” Feminist Review 108(1):125–33. 

Moore, Brenda L. 1999. “Reflections of Society: The Intersection of Race and Gender in the US Army in World War II.” Beyond Zero Tolerance: Discrimination in Military Culture 125–42.

Moore, Mignon R. 2012. “Intersectionality and the Study of Black, Sexual Minority Women.” Gender & Society 26(1):33–39.

Moorman, Jessica D. and Kristen Harrison. 2016. “Gender, Race, and Risk: Intersectional Risk.  Management in the Sale of Sex Online.” The Journal of Sex Research 53(7):816–24.

Morgan, Joan. 2015. “Why We Get Off: Moving Towards a Black Feminist Politics of Pleasure.” The Black Scholar 45(4):36–46. 

N

Naples, Nancy A. 2009. “Teaching Intersectionality Intersectionally.” International Feminist Journal of Politics 11(4):566–77. 

Nash, Jennifer C. 2008. “Re-Thinking Intersectionality.” Feminist Review 89(89):1–15.

National Park Foundation. 2016. LGBTQ America: A Theme Study of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender & Queer History.

Noble, Safiya Umoja. 2016. “A Future for Intersectional Black Feminist Studies.” Scholar & Feminist Online 13(3):1–8.

Noble, Safiya Umoja. 2012. “Searching For Black Girls: Old Traditions In New Media.”

Noble, Safiya Umoja. 2013. “Google Search: Hyper-Visibility as a Means of Rendering Black Women and Girls Invisible.” 

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Paxton, Pamela, Sheri Kunovich, and Melanie M. Hughes. 2007. “Gender in Politics.” Annual Review of Political Science 33(2007):271–84.

Petzen, Jennifer. 2012. “Queer Trouble: Centring Race in Queer and Feminist Politics.” Journal of Intercultural Studies 33(3):289–302. 

R

Rapp, Laura, Deeanna Button, Benjamin Fleury-Steiner, and Ruth Fleury-Steiner. 2010. “The Internet as a Tool for Black Feminist Activism: Lessons From an Online Antirape Protest.” Feminist Criminology 5(3):244–62.

Ray, Rashawn. 2014. “An Intersectional Analysis to Explaining a Lack of Physical Activity Among Middle Class Black Women.” Sociology Compass 8(6):780–91.

Ray, Rashawn. 2008. “The Professional Allowance: How Socioeconomic Status Characteristics Allow Some Men To Fulfill Family Role Expectations Better Than Other Men *.” 34(2): 325–49.

Ray, Rashawn and Jason A. Rosow. 2009. “Getting Off and Getting Intimate.” 1–24.

Rickford, R. 2015. “Black Lives Matter: Toward a Modern Practice of Mass Struggle.” New Labor Forum 25(1):34–42. 

Rightler-McDaniels, Jodi L. and Elizabeth M. Hendrickson. 2014. “Hoes and Hashtags: Constructions of Gender and Race in Trending Topics.” Social Semiotics 24(2):175–90.  

Roberts, Dorothy. 2014. “Complicating the Triangle of Race, Class and State: The Insights of. Black Feminists.” Ethnic and Racial Studies 37(10):1776–82. 

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Schradie, Jen. 2012. “The Trend Of Class, Race, And Ethnicity In Social Media Inequality: Who Still Cannot Afford to Blog?” Information, Communication & Society 15(4):555–71.

Scola, Becki. 2006. “Women of Color in State Legislatures: Gender , Race , Ethnicity and Legislative Office Holding Women of Color in State Legislatures: Gender , Race , Ethnicity and Legislative Office Holding.” Journal of Women, Politics & Policy 28(3–4): 43–70.

Sheets, Crystal Faye. 2012. “State Injustice: Trapping Black Women As ‘sex Offenders’ For Prostitution In ‘the Big Easy.’”

Shields, Stephanie A. 2008. “Gender: An Intersectionality Perspective.” Sex Roles 59(5–6):301–11.

Smith, Sharon. 2013. “Black Feminism and Intersectionality.” International Socialist Review.

Stevenson, Stephanie Y. 2012. The Politics of “Being Too Fast”: Policing Urban Black Adolescent Female Bodies, Sexual Agency, Desire, and Academic Resilience. College Park. 

Stoetzler, M. and N. Yuval-Davis. 2002. “Standpoint Theory, Situated Knowledge and the. Situated Imagination.” Feminist Theory 3(3):315–33.

Sweet, Elizabeth L. 2015. “Latina Kitchen Table Planning Saving Communities:  Intersectionality and Insurgencies in an Anti- Immigrant City.” Local Environment: The. International Journal of Justice and Sustainability 20(November):728–43.

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Takagi, Dana. 2015. “First Precepts for Democracy and Research Practices in Ethnic Studies: Iteration, Collaboration, and Reflection .” Cultural Studies ↔ Critical Methodologies 15(2):100–111. 

Terriquez, Veronica. 2015. “Intersectional Mobilization, Social Movement Spillover, and Queer. Youth Leadership in the Immigrant Rights Movement.” Social Problems 62(3):343–62.

Thomas, Anita Jones, Jason Daniel Hacker, and Denada Hoxha. 2011. “Gendered Racial Identity of Black Young Women.” Sex Roles 64(7–8):530–42.

Tomlinson, Barbara. 2013. “To Tell the Truth and Not Get Trapped: Desire, Distance, and Intersectionality at the Scene of Argument.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 38(4):993–1017. 

Tounsel, Timeka Nicol. 2015. “The Black Woman That Media Built: Content Creation, Interpretation, and the Making of the Black Female Self.” University of Michigan.

Tremayne, Mark. 2014. “Anatomy of Protest in the Digital Era: A Network Analysis of Twitter and Occupy Wall Street.” Social Movement Studies 13(1):110–26. 

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Vargas, Robert and Philip McHarris. 2017. “Race and State in City Police Spending Growth.”  Sociology of Race and Ethnicity 3(1):96–112. 

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West, Carolyn M. 2004. “Black Women and Intimate Partner Violence: New Directions for Research.” Journal of interpersonal violence 19(12):1487–93.

Wilkins, Amy C. 2012. “Becoming Black Women: Intimate Stories and Intersectional Identities.” Social Psychology Quarterly 75(2):173–96. 

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Yeon, Hae and Myra Marx. 2010. “Practicing Intersectionality in Sociological Research: A Critical Analysis of Inclusions , Interactions, and Institutions in the Study of Inequality.” Sociological Theory 28(2):129–49.

Yuval-Davis, N. 2006. “Intersectionality and Feminist Politics.” European Journal of Women’s Studies 13(3):193–209.

Articles

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Acker, Joan. 2006. “Inequality Regimes: Gender, Class, and Race in Organizations.” Gender & Society 20(4):441–64.

Alexander-Floyd, N. G. 2010. “Critical Race Black Feminism: A Jurisprudence of Resistance and the Transformation of the Academy.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society.

Alexander-Floyd, Nikol G. 2012. “Disappearing Acts: Reclaiming Intersectionality in the Social Sciences in a Post-Black Feminist Era.” Feminist Formations 24(1):1–25.  

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Bailey, Moya. 2013. “New Terms of Resistance: A Response to Zenzele Isoke.” Souls 15(4): 341–43.

Baker, Tamara A., Nicole T. Buchanan, Chivon A. Mingo, Rosalyn Roker, and Candace S. Brown. 2015. “Reconceptualizing Successful Aging among Black Women and the Relevance of the Strong Black Woman Archetype.” Gerontologist 55(1):51–57.

Balzer, Cassandra L. 2016. “Making the Movement Matter: Conceptualizing Social Movement Success and Its Relation to Participation.” 

Bejarano, Christina, Nadia E. Brown, Sarah Allen Gershon, and Celeste Montoya. “Shared identities: Intersectionality, linked fate, and perceptions of political candidates.” Political Research Quarterly 74, no. 4 (2021): 970-985.

Berridge, Susan and Laura Portwood-Stacer. 2015. “Feminism, Hashtags and Violence Against Women and Girls.” Feminist Media Studies 15(2):341–58.

Best, Rachel Kahn, Lauren B. Edelman, Linda Hamilton Krieger, and Scott R. Eliason. 2011. “Multiple Disadvantages: An Empirical Test of Intersectionality Theory in EEO Litigation.” Law & Society Review 45(4):991–1025. Retrieved October 18, 2016.

Blackwell, Maylei and Nadine Naber. 2002. “Intersectionality in an Era of Globalization: The Implications of the UN World Conference against Racism for Transnational Feminist Practices—A Conference Report.” Meridians 2(2):237–48.

Bonilla-Silva, Eduardo. 2015. “More than Prejudice: Restatement, Reflections, and New Directions in Critical Race Theory.” Sociology of Race and Ethnicity 1(1):73–87.

Bonilla-Silva, Eduardo, Victor Ray, Rose Buckelew, and Elizabeth Freeman. 2010. “Critical Race Theories , Colorism , and the Decade ’ S Research on Families of Color.” Journal of Marriage and Family 72(June):440–59.

Boylorn, Robin M. 2013. “Blackgirl Blogs, Auto/ethnography, and Crunk Feminism.” Liminalities: A Journal of Performance Studies 9(2):73–82.

Boylorn, Robin M. 2008. “As Seen on TV: An Autoethnographic Reflection on Race and Reality Television.” Critical Studies in Media Communication 25(4):413–33.

Brah, Avtar and Ann Phoenix. 2004. “Ain’t I A Woman? Revisiting Intersectionality.” Feminist Challenges: Crossing Boundaries 5(3):75–86.

Branch, Enobong Hannah. 2007. “The Creation Of Restricted Opportunity Due To The Intersection Of Race & Sex: Black Women In The Bottom Class.” Race, Gender, & Class 14(3):247–64.

Brock, André. 2016. “Critical Technocultural Discourse Analysis.” New Media & Society 1–19.

Brooks, Kinitra, Martin, Kameelah, & Simmons, Lakisha. (2021). Conjure Feminism: Toward a GenealogyHypatia, 36(3), 452-461. doi:10.1017/hyp.2021.43

Brooks, Kinitra and Kameelah Martin. “’I Used to be Your Sweet Mama’: Beyoncé at the Crossroads of Blues and Conjure in Lemonade.” The Lemonade Reader. Edited by Kinitra D. Brooks and Kameelah Martin. Routledge Press, 2019. pp. 202-214.

Brown, Melissa. 2017. “The Sociology of Antiracism in Black and White.” Sociology Compass 11(2):e12451.

Brown, Nadia E., and Danielle C. Lemi. “” Life for Me Ain’t Been No Crystal Stair”: Black Women Candidates and the Democratic Party.” BUL Rev. 100 (2020): 1613.

Brown, Nadia, and Sarah Allen Gershon. “Body politics.” Politics, Groups, and Identities 5.1 (2017): 1-3.

Brown, Nadia. ““It’s more than hair… that’s why you should care”: the politics of appearance for Black women state legislators.” Politics, Groups, and Identities 2.3 (2014): 295-312.

Brown, Nadia, and Kira Hudson Banks. “Black Women’s agenda setting in the Maryland state legislature.” Journal of African American Studies 18.2 (2014): 164-180.

Brown, Nadia E. “Political participation of women of color: An intersectional analysis.” Journal of Women, Politics & Policy 35.4 (2014): 315-348.

Brown, Nadia E. “Negotiating the insider/outsider status: Black feminist ethnography and legislative studies.” Journal of Feminist Scholarship 3.1 (2012): 19-34.

Browne, Irene and Joya Misra. 2003. “The Intersection of Gender and Race in the Labor Market.” Annual Review of Sociology 29 (1997): 487–513. 

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Calhoun, Craig. 2008. “Foreword: Engaging Contradictions: Theory, Politics, and Methods of Activist Scholarship.” 

Carbado, Devon W. 2013. “Colorblind Intersectionality.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society. 38(4):811–45. 

Chatelain, Marcia and Kaavya Asoka. 2015. “Women and Black Lives Matter.” Dissent 62(3): 54–61.

Chesney-Lind, M. 2006. “Patriarchy, Crime, and Justice: Feminist Criminology in an Era of Backlash.” Feminist Criminology 1(1):6–26. 

Cho, Sumi, Kimberle Williams Crenshaw, and Leslie McCall. 2013. “Toward a Field of Intersectionality Studies: Theory, Applications, and Praxis.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 38(4):785–810. 

Chong, Natividad Gutiérrez. 2014. “Human Trafficking and Sex Industry: Does Ethnicity and Race Matter?” Journal of Intercultural Studies 35(2):196–213. 

Choo, Hae Yeon and Myra Marx Ferree. 2010. “Practicing Intersectionality in Sociological Research: A Critical Analysis of Inclusions , Interactions , and Institutions in the Study of Inequalities.” Sociological Theory 28(2):129–49.

Chun, Jennifer Jihye, George Lipsitz, and Young Shin. 2013. “Intersectionality as a Social Movement Strategy: Asian Immigrant Women Advocates.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 38(4):917–40. 

Clair, Robin Patric, Nadia E. Brown, Debbie S. Dougherty, Hannah K. Delemeester, Patricia Geist-Martin, William I. Gorden, Tyler Sorg, and Paaige K. Turner. “# MeToo, sexual harassment: an article, a forum, and a dream for the future.” Journal of Applied Communication Research (2019).

Collins, P. H. 1998. “It ’ S All in the Family: Intersections of Gender , Race , and Nation Stable.” Hypatia 13(3):62–82. 

Collins, Patricia Hill. 2010. “The New Politics of Community.” American Sociological Review 75(1):7–30. 

Collins, Patricia Hill. 2015. “Intersectionality’s Definitional Dilemmas.” Annual Review of  Sociology 41:1–20.

Collins, Patricia Hill. 2007. “Pushing the Boundaries or Business as Usual? Race, Class, and Gender Studies and Sociological Inquiry.” Sociology in America: A History 572–604.

Cooper, Brittney C. 2015. “Love No Limit: Towards a Black Feminist Future ( In Theory ).” The Black Scholar 45(4):7–21.

Cottom, Tressie McMillan. 2016. “Black CyberFeminism: Intersectionality, Institutions and Digital Sociology.” in Digital Sociologies, edited by J. Daniels, K. Gregory, and T. M.Cottom. Bristol: Policy Press.

Covarrubias, Alejandro. 2011. “Quantitative Intersectionality: A Critical Race Analysis of the Chicana/o Educational Pipeline.” Journal of Latinos and Education 10(2):86–105.

Crenshaw, Kimberle Williams. 1991. “Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality , Identity Politics, and Violence Against Women of Color.” Stanford Law Review 43(6):1241–99. 

Crenshaw, Kimberle Williams, Andrea J. Ritchie, Rachel Anspach, Rachel Gilmer, and Luke Harris. 2015. Say Her Name: Resisting Police Brutality Against Black Women. New York.

Cruz, Ariane. 2016. “Playing with the Politics of Perversion: Policing BDSM, Pornography, and Black Female Sexuality.” Souls 18(2–4):379–407. 

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Daniels, Jessie. 2016. “The Trouble with White Feminism: Whiteness, Digital Feminism and the Intersectional Internet .’” in The Intersectional Internet, Section Two: Cultural Values in the Machine.

Davis, Kathy. 2008. “Intersectionality as Buzzword: A Sociology of Science Perspective on What Makes a Feminist Theory Successful.” Feminist Theory 9(1):67–85.

Denny, Kathleen E. n.d. “Workplace Evaluations of Parents by Race: Unraveling Perceptual Penalties and Premiums Kathleen E. Denny.” Pp. 1–52 in. 

Díaz, Sara P. 2016. “‘A Racial Trust’: Individualist, Eugenicist, and Capitalist Respectability in the Life of Roger Arliner Young.” Souls.

Dixon, Kitsy. 2014. “Feminist Online Identity: Analyzing the Presence of Hashtag Feminism.” Journal of Arts and Humanities 3(7):34–40. 

Donovan, Roxanne. A. and Lindsey. M. West. 2014. “Stress and Mental Health: Moderating Role of the Strong Black Woman Stereotype.” Journal of Black Psychology.

Drake, Jarrett M. 2016. “Liberatory Archives Towards Belonging and Believing Part 2 – On Archivy – Medium-1.” Medium. 

Dubrow, Joshua Kjerulf. 2008. “How Can We Account for Intersectionality in Quantitative Analysis of Survey Data? Empirical Illustration for Central and Eastern Europe.” Ask 17(17):85–100.

Dy, A. M., S. Marlow, and L. Martin. 2016. “A Web of Opportunity or the Same Old Story?  Women Digital Entrepreneurs and Intersectionality Theory.” Human Relations

E

Ender, Morten G., David E. Rohall, and Michael D. Matthews. 2015. “Intersecting Identities: Race, Military Affiliation, and Youth Attitudes towards War.” War & Society 34(3):230– 46. 

F

Fackler, Katharina M. 2016. “Ambivalent Frames: Rosa Parks and the Visual Grammar of  Respectability.” Souls 1v8(2–4):271–82. 

Falcón, Sylvanna M. 2012. “Transnational Feminism and Contextualized Intersectionality at the 2001 World Conference Against Racism.” Journal of Women’s History 24(4):99–120.

Fasula, Amy M., Monique Carry, and Kim S. Miller. 2014. “A Multidimensional Framework for  the Meanings of the Sexual Double Standard and Its Application for the Sexual Health of. Young Black Women in the U.S.” Journal of sex research 51(2):170–83.

Finley, Jessyka. 2016. “Raunch and Redress: Interrogating Pleasure in Black Women’s Stand-up Comedy.” The Journal of Popular Culture 49(4):780–98. 

G

Gershon, Sarah Allen, Celeste Montoya, Christina Bejarano, and Nadia Brown. “Intersectional linked fate and political representation.” Politics, Groups, and Identities 7, no. 3 (2019): 642-653.

Gilbert, Keon L. and Rashawn Ray. 2016. “Why Police Kill Black Males with Impunity: Applying Public Health Critical Race Praxis (PHCRP) to Address the Determinants of. Policing Behaviors and ‘Justifiable’ Homicides in the USA.” Journal of Urban Health. 93:122–40.
Gillborn, D. 2015. “Intersectionality, Critical Race Theory, and the Primacy of Racism: Race,  Class, Gender, and Disability in Education.” Qualitative Inquiry 21(3):277–87. 

Goff, Phillip Atiba, Margaret A. Thomas, and Matthew Christian Jackson. 2008. “‘Ain’t I a Woman?’: Towards an Intersectional Approach to Person Perception and Group-Based. Harms.” Sex Roles.

Golash-Boza, Tanya. 2016. “A Critical and Comprehensive Sociological Theory of Race and. Racism.” Sociology of Race and Ethnicity 2(2):129–41. 
Golder, Scott A. and Michael W. Macy. 2014. “Digital Footprints: Opportunities and Challenges.  for Online Social Research.” Annual Review of Sociology 40(1):129–52. 

Gosine, Kevin. 2012. “Accomplished Black North Americans and Antiracism Education: Towards Bridging a Seeming Divide.” Critical Sociology 38(5):707–21. 

Greene, KJ. 2008. “Intellectual Property at the Intersection of Race and Gender: Lady Sings the Blues.” American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy … 16(3):365–85. 

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Hamilton, Laura and Elizabeth A. Armstrong. 2009. “Gendered Sexuality in Young Adulthood: Double Binds and Flawed Options.” Gender & Society 23(5):589–616. 
Hancock, Ange-Marie. 2007. “Intersectionality as a Normative and Empirical Paradigm.” Politics & Gender 3(2):41–45.

Hankivsky, O. and R. Cormier. 2010. “Intersectionality and Public Policy: Some Lessons from Existing Models.” Political Research Quarterly 64(1):217–29. 

Harnois, Catherine E. 2010. “Race, Gender, and the Black Women’s Standpoint.” Sociological Forum 25(1):68–85.

Harvey, Adia M. 2005. “Becoming Entrepreneurs.” Gender & Society 19(6):789–808. 

Henderson, Abney L. and Cheryl R. Rodriguez. 2014. “Four Women An Analysis of the Artistry of Black Women in the Black Arts Movement, 1960s-1980s.” University of South Florida.

Herring, Cedric and L. Henderson. 2012. “From Affirmative Action to Diversity: Toward a Critical Diversity Perspective.” Critical Sociology 38(5):629–43.

Howard, Judith A. 2000. “Social Pyschology of Identities.” Annual Review of Sociology 26:367–93. 

Hyde, Janet Shibley. 2014. “Gender Similarities and Differences.” Annual Review of Psychology 65(1):373–98.

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Ifekwunigwe, Jayne O. 2004. “Recasting ‘Black Venus’ in the New African Diaspora.” Women’s Studies International Forum 27(4):397–412. 

Isoke, Zenzele. 2014. “Can’t I Be Seen? Can’t I Be Heard? Black Women Queering Politics in Newark.” Gender, Place & Culture 21(3):353–69. 

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Jones, Angela. 2015. “For Black Models Scroll Down: Webcam Modeling and the Racialization of Erotic Labor.” Sexuality and Culture 19(4):776–99. 

Jones, Angela. 2015. “Sex Work in a Digital Era.” Sociology Compass.

Jonsson, Terese. 2016. “The Narrative Reproduction of White Feminist Racism.” Feminist Review 113.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia S. 2012. “Blogging at the Intersections: Black Women, Identity, and Lesbianism.” Politics & Gender 8(3):405–14.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2019. “Licking salt: A Black woman’s tale of betrayal, adversity and survival.” Feminist Formations, 31(1): 67-84.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2017. “Beyond the side eye: Black women’s ancestral anger as a liberatory practice.” Journal of Black Sexuality and Relationships, 4(1): 61-81.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2016. “Learning from the doers: Women of color AIDS service organizations and their understanding of intersectionality.” National Political Science Review, 18141-160.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2016. “Reflections on “The Difference that Difference Makes.” Politics, Gender and Identities. 1-3

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2014. “I ain’t your darn help: Black women as the help in intersectionality research.” National Political Science Review, 16: 19-30.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia and Wilson, Salida. 2014. “Talking” about gender while ignoring race and class: A discourse analysis of pay equity debates.” National Political Science Review, 16: 49-66.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2013. “Now you see me, now you don’t: My political fight against the invisibility of Black women in intersectionality research.” Politics, Gender and Identities, 1 (1): 101-109.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2012. “Blogging at the intersections: Black women, identity, and lesbianism.” Politics & Gender, 8: 405-414

Jordan-Zachery, Julia, and Seltzer, Richard. 2012. “Responses to affirmative action: Is there a question order affect?” The Social Science Journal, 49 (2): 119-126.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2008. “A declaration of war: An analysis of how the invisibility of Black women makes them targets of the War on Drugs.” Journal of Women, Politics & Policy, 29(2): 231-259.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2003. “The female bogeyman: Political implications of criminalizing Black women.” Souls: A Critical Journal of Black Politics, Culture, and Society, 5(2): 42-62.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2007. “Am I a Black woman or a woman who is Black? A few thoughts on the meaning of intersectionality.” Politics & Gender, 3(2): 254-263. 

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2014. “Black girlhood and “The Help”: Constructing Black girlhood in a “post” racial and “post” gender state.” In From Uncle Tom’s Cabin to the Help: Critical perspectives on white-authored narratives of Black life, edited by Claire Garcia, Vershawn A. Young and Charise Pimentel. (New York: Palgrave MacMillian). pp. 83-94.

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2013. “Black women occupying the academy: Merging critical mothering and mentoring to survive and thrive.” In Laboring positions: Back women, mothering, and the academy, edited by Sekile Nzinga-Johnson. (Demeter Press Toronto, Canada). pp. 273-291

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2007. “The female bogeyman: Political implications of criminalizing Black women” (reprint). In Racializing justice, disenfranchising lives: The racism, criminal justice, and law reader, edited by Manning Marable, Ian Steinberg and Keesha Middlemass. (New York: Palgrave Macmillan). pp. 101-121

Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2006. “The war on drugs and welfare policy: The impact of their intersection on Black women in urban America.” In The Black Urban Community, edited by Gayle T. Tate and Lewis A. Randolph, (New York: Palgrave/Macmillian). pp. 268-282.

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Kalev, Alexandra. 2009. “Cracking the Glass Cages? Restructuring and Ascriptive Inequality at Work.” American Journal of Sociology 114(6):1591–1643. 

Kang, Sonia K. and Galen V Bodenhausen. 2015. “Multiple Identities in Social Perception and Interaction: Challenges and Opportunities.” Annual Review of Psychology 66:547–74.

Karkazis, Katrina, Laura Mamo, and Ugo Edu. 2016. “Keeping an Eye on Power in Maintaining Racial Oppression and Race-Based Violence.” The American Journal of Bioethics 16(4):  25–27. 

Kearl, Michelle Kelsey. 2015. “‘Is Gay the New Black?’: An Intersectional Perspective on Social Movement Rhetoric in California’s Proposition 8 Debate.” Communication & Critical/Cultural Studies 12(1):63–82. 

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “The labor of (re) reading plantation landscapes fungible (ly).” Antipode 48.4 (2016): 1022-1039.

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “One strike evictions, state space and the production of abject black female bodies.” Critical Sociology 36.1 (2010): 45-64.

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “Travels and Travails of Settler Colonialism in Queer Natal.” GLQ 27.3 (2021): 485-488.

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “Humans involved: Lurking in the lines of posthumanist flight.” Critical Ethnic Studies 3.1 (2017): 162-185.

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “Humans involved: Lurking in the lines of posthumanist flight.” Critical Ethnic Studies 3.1 (2017): 162-185.

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “Post-indentitarian and post-intersectional anxiety in the neoliberal corporate university.” Feminist Formations (2015): 114-138.

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “New World Grammars: The’Unthought’Black Discourses of Conquest.” Theory & Event 19.4 (2016).

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “Post-indentitarian and post-intersectional anxiety in the neoliberal corporate university.” Feminist Formations (2015): 114-138.

King, Tiffany Lethabo. “Black’Feminisms’ and Pessimism: Abolishing Moynihan’s Negro Family.” Theory & Event 21.1 (2018): 68-87.

Lethabo King, Tiffany. “Some Black feminist notes on Native feminisms and the flesh.” Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 39.1 (2021): 9-15.

Knapp, Gudrun-Axeli. 2005. “Race, Class, Gender: Reclaiming Baggage in Fast Travelling Theories.” European Journal of Women’s Studies 12(3):249–65. 

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Lake, Nadine. 2014. “Black Lesbian Bodies – Reflections on a Queer South African Archive.” Africa Insight 44(1):69–83.

Lee, Hedwig and Margaret Takako Hicken. 2016. “Death by a Thousand Cuts: The Health Implications of Black Respectability Politics.” Souls.

Lemi, Danielle Casarez, and Nadia E. Brown. “Melanin and curls: evaluation of Black women candidates.” Journal of Race, Ethnicity, and Politics 4.2 (2019): 259-296.

Lewis, Jioni A., Ruby Mendenhall, Stacy A. Harwood, and Margaret Browne Huntt. 2013.  “Coping with Gendered Racial Microaggressions among Black Women College. Students.” Journal of African American Studies 17(1):51–73.

Lewis, Mel Michelle. 2011. “Body of Knowledge: Black Queer Feminist Pedagogy, Praxis, and Embodied Text.” Journal of lesbian studies 15(1):49–57. 

Lomsky-Feder, Edna and Orna Sasson-Levy. 2015. “Serving the Army as Secretaries: Intersectionality, Multi-Level Contract and Subjective Experience of Citizenship.” British. Journal of Sociology 66(1):173–92.

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Macias, K. 2015. “‘Sisters in the Collective Struggle’: Sounds of Silence and Reflections on the  Unspoken Assault on Black Females in Modern America.” Cultural Studies ↔ Critical. Methodologies 15(4):260–64. 

Macias, Kelly. 2015. “Tweeting Away Our Blues: An Interpretative Phenomenological Approach to Exploring Black Women ’ S Use of Social Media to Combat Misogynoir.” Nova Southeastern University. 

Mahler, Sarah J., Mayurakshi Chaudhuri, and Vrushali Patil. 2015. “Scaling Intersectionality:  Advancing Feminist Analysis of Transnational Families.” Sex Roles 73(3–4):100–112.

Martin, Kameelah. 2022.  “Black Feminist Voodoo Aesthetics, Conjure Feminism, and the Arts.” In the Black Fantastic. Edited by Ekow Eshun. London, UK: Thames & Hudson, 138-144.

Martin, Kameelah  2022.  “’A Consort of the Spirits’ or How to Cultivate Indigo, Conjured by Herself.” The Langston Hughes Review, Vol 28, No.1,  1-9.

Martin, Kameelah.   2018.  “Trans-disciplinary Orientations: Theory, Methodology, and Literature of the African Diaspora.” Africana Methodology: A Social Study of Research Triangulation and Metatheory on Africana Phenomenon. Edited by James L. Conyers, Jr. Cambridge Scholars Publishing,  pp. 121-142.

Martin, Kameelah.  2018.   “’What you Really Know ‘bout the Dirrrty South?’: Black Women & Spirit Work in the Southern Imagination.” Introduction to Graphic Novel Box of Bones: The Trouble I’ve Seen. Ayize Jama Everette and John Jennings. Greenbelt, MD: Rosarium Publishing.

Martin, Kameelah.  2017.  “Womanism.” American Literature in Transition, 1980-1990Quentin Miller, Editor. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press 42-53.

Martin, Kameelah  2013.  “Conjuring Up an Image: The African American Healing Woman in the Films of Julie Dash & Kasi Lemmons.” Race, Gender, & Identity: A Social Science Comparative Analysis of Africana Culture. Africana Studies Vol. 5. (Sept 2013):7-18. 

Martin, Kameelah. 2013. “Caroline’s Nightmare: The Skeleton Key as Visual Echo of Charles Chesnutt’s Conjure Tales.” College Language Association Journal 56.4 (June 2013): 298-313. 

Martin, Kameelah. 2013.  “Hoodoo Ladies and High Conjurers: New Directions for an Old Archetype.” Literary Expressions of African Spirituality. Eds. Elizabeth West and Carol Marsh-Lockett. Lanham, MD. Lexington Press. 119-144. 

Martin, Kameelah. 2013. “Rethinking Ishmael Reed: Neo-Hoodoo Womanist Text?” On the Aesthetic Legacy of Ishmael Reed: Contemporary Reassessments. Eds. Paul Kareem Tayyar and Sämi Ludwig. Huntington Beach, CA: World Parade Books. 108-128. (reprint)

Martin, Kameelah. 2012.  “Disney’s Tia Dalma: A Critical Interrogation of the ‘Imagineered’ Priestess.” Black Women, Gender, and Families. Vol. 6, no. 1 (Spring 2012): 97-122.

Martin, Kameelah. 2010. “Charles W. Chesnutt and the Legacy of The Conjure Woman.” Charles Waddell Chesnutt: Placing A Stamp on America. Ed. Mary B. Zeigler. Spec. issue of Studies in the Literary Imagination. 43.2 (Fall 2010): 15-30.

Martin, Kameelah. 2008.   “Rethinking Ishmael Reed’s Mumbo Jumbo: Neo-Hoodoo Womanist Text?” College Language Association Journal 52.2 (Dec. 2008) 111-131. Full text

Martin, Kameelah.  2008.  “Women and Voodoo: A Conversation with Jewell Parker Rhodes.” Serving the Spirits: Women and Voodoo in Literature and Popular Culture. Eds. Kim Wells and Kameelah Martin Samuel. Spec. issue of Women Writers: A Zine. (Aug. 2008).

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