Jump to content

Black Women's Health in the Age of Hip Hop and HIVAIDS A Narrative Remix


Recommended Posts

7d3fa5b0c114b74e0d9dfa616c0f5061.webp
Black Women's Health in the Age of Hip Hop and HIV/AIDS: A Narrative Remix
by Nghana tamu Lewis
English | 2025 | ISBN: 0814215807 | 176 Pages | True PDF | 1.67 MB

In Black Women's Health in the Age of Hip Hop and HIV/AIDS, Nghana tamu Lewis chronicles the work of five black women creators to demonstrate how hip hop feminism operates as a vital tool for interpreting and building knowledge about the lived experiences of black women and girls. Between 1996 and 2006, novelists Sapphire and Sister Souljah, television producer Mara Brock Akil, and playwrights Nikkole Salter and Danai Gurira addressed the neglect of black women's health in mainstream biomedical and public health discourses. At a time when responses to the HIV/AIDS epidemic largely focused on gay white men, Lewis argues, these creators deployed the strategies of hip hop feminism to frame and untangle issues of self-care, risk, and the ways that caregiving roles place black women and girls at disproportionate risk of adverse health outcomes. Building on previous intersectionality and social justice advocacy scholarship, Lewis argues that Sapphire, Souljah, Brock Akil, and Salter and Gurira both documented the effects of the epidemic on black women and girls and equipped the masses with solutions-oriented responses to the crisis, thus intervening in ways that mainstream biomedical and public health research has yet to do.


423b519448d4e936894130c701f35288.jpg

RapidGator
https://rg.to/file/ad9c0d9dbe3b822f029ea3dc0c49a97f/a5jx6.7z.html
TakeFile
https://takefile.link/uplphbdxx32e/a5jx6.7z.html
Fileaxa
https://fileaxa.com/2uwfbsg16ww1/a5jx6.7z
Fikper
https://fikper.com/sF6dz22Z70/a5jx6.7z.html


Link to comment
Share on other sites

Please sign in to comment

You will be able to leave a comment after signing in



Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...