black_dismantling_black_manhood
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| black_dismantling_black_manhood [2026/01/28 23:24] – [Physical Abuse and Manhood] nthodal | black_dismantling_black_manhood [2026/01/30 16:39] (current) – [Displacement from Familial and Social Roles of Manhood] smilton | ||
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| One of the ways the article discussed the assaults on their manhood was through the changing of names and how that served to remove yet another connection to West Africa.The descriptions of how much meaning there was to names and reflected those connections to manhood. Not only did changing someone' | One of the ways the article discussed the assaults on their manhood was through the changing of names and how that served to remove yet another connection to West Africa.The descriptions of how much meaning there was to names and reflected those connections to manhood. Not only did changing someone' | ||
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| + | This section powerfully reframes the Long March and Middle Passage not just as physical displacement, | ||
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| + | The section touched and focused on how the European men were breaking and destroying the perceived manhood of West Africans, who were forced in to the Long March and the Middle Passage. The assaults against this manhood which the Europeans were trying to destroy was in order to instill their " | ||
| ==== Resistance as Affirmation of Manhood ==== | ==== Resistance as Affirmation of Manhood ==== | ||
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| On the plantation, as well as in West Africa, physical strength was a visible symbol of masculinity. However, what had been in West Africa a symbol of martial prowess and pride on the plantation was a result of forced, physical labor and was feared - not respected - by those in power. The physical strength of an enslaved African man, while useful to the profit margins of his enslaver, challenged the authority of that enslaver, who relied on physical force to maintain his position. As a result, African men who had the strength to resist were often physically abused to ensure subservience. Thus, physical strength, which would have given honor to a man in West Africa, could worsen one's treatment in the paranoia of the plantation system. (Nick Thodal) | On the plantation, as well as in West Africa, physical strength was a visible symbol of masculinity. However, what had been in West Africa a symbol of martial prowess and pride on the plantation was a result of forced, physical labor and was feared - not respected - by those in power. The physical strength of an enslaved African man, while useful to the profit margins of his enslaver, challenged the authority of that enslaver, who relied on physical force to maintain his position. As a result, African men who had the strength to resist were often physically abused to ensure subservience. Thus, physical strength, which would have given honor to a man in West Africa, could worsen one's treatment in the paranoia of the plantation system. (Nick Thodal) | ||
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| + | This section shows how plantation violence functioned as a daily mechanism for redefining Black manhood by making physical strength and resistance liabilities rather than sources of dignity. Through figures like Venture Smith and Equiano, physical punishment became a tool not just for discipline but for psychological restructuring, | ||
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| ==== Displacement from Familial and Social Roles of Manhood ==== | ==== Displacement from Familial and Social Roles of Manhood ==== | ||
| === Husband === | === Husband === | ||
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| + | On top of the extreme physical abuse that African captives aboard slave ships were forced to endure, countless women were also sexually abused by their white European captors. In West Africa, being able to protect one's family and community was a highly valued trait and was the mark of a great man, but aboard slave ships, husbands were completely physically unable to protect their wives from such sexual abuse. This inability to protect and avenge the suffering of their wives caused many West African men to view themselves as dysfunctional as husbands and as men, since, not only were they unable to prove their virility by defending themselves, but they were further unable to defend their wives. (Noah Rutkowski) | ||
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| + | With the removal of traditional West African manhood, the typical husband that cares for, provides, and protects their wives is no longer allowed in the Plantation society that the West Africans have been brought to. This is also seen with the Long March and Middle Passage, through the bondage of the men and not allowing them to protect or comfort their wives who are being sexually assaulted. However, on the Plantations the further removal of allowing men to be husbands was also through the sale of the enslaved men, taking them from their wives and placing them on separate plantations across the state or in a different state. -(Sage Milton) | ||
| === Father === | === Father === | ||
| Plantation life severely limited African men's abilities to father their children, specifically in ways that affirmed their own ideas of manhood. Specifically, | Plantation life severely limited African men's abilities to father their children, specifically in ways that affirmed their own ideas of manhood. Specifically, | ||
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| + | The notion of fatherhood that West African men had was impossible to maintain in plantation life, specifically for the first generation of enslaved men, whether they came over as adults or children. Fathers had very little time to care or teach their sons their culture or language. Within slavery and the new connection of manhood/ masculinity to race, the fathers were not seen or treated as men, and to some degree these enslaved men were sold to use as a way to create more workers for these plantation owners, not allowing them to be fathers to the children that they were forced to create. Fully removing the cultural aspects of fatherhood from these men. -(Sage Milton) | ||
| + | ==== Black Manhood in the Media ==== | ||
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| + | Despite the black masculinity model encouraged discipline, respect, and moral constraint African American men still faced stereotypes (highlighted in the media) proving structural marginalization. Media represented black men as over masculine, sexual, and criminal beings which created consequences for both black men and women in society. The deconstruction of black manhood caused a reshaping of black womanhood and affects the gender hierarchy between black men and women, where both are faced with internal and external forms of domination. To redefine themselves, black men lean on community and cultural expression to push for change and recognition. They do this not as an attempt to mimic the white version of masculinity, | ||
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black_dismantling_black_manhood.1769642683.txt.gz · Last modified: by nthodal
