El camino de las heroínas negras: Blaxploitation

  • Sara Müller
Keywords: Feminists movements ; Black Power ; Blaxploitation ; black heroines ; stereotypes ; cultural myths

Abstract

In the United States feminism did not originate from the women that were more directly victims of the sexist oppression; mentally, physically and spiritually beaten daily; women without the necessary strength to change their life conditions” (Hooks, 2004, p.33). Feminist activists were white and wealthy class even as black women were a silent majority. Although many women were part of Black Power, the movement was defined and assembled in the media, the pop culture and the arts by men. These groups maintained a patriarchal organization; structures constituted by male leadership. They “realized of the nature of the male domination when participating in anti-classist and anti-racist spaces with men who spoke to the world about the importance of freedom despite subordinating the women among their own ranks” (Hooks, 2017, p.22). There was neither a place destined for black women amongst white feminists nor the Black Power of men.

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Published
2020-09-23
How to Cite
Müller, S. (2020). El camino de las heroínas negras: Blaxploitation . Cuadernos Del Centro De Estudios De Diseño Y Comunicación, (117). https://doi.org/10.18682/cdc.vi117.4275