TY - BOOK AU - Hill,Shirley A. TI - Black intimacies: a gender perspective on families and relationships T2 - The gender lens series SN - 0759101515 AV - E185.86 .H666 2005 U1 - 306.808996073 22 PY - 2005///] CY - Walnut Creek, CA PB - AltaMira Press KW - African American families N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; CHAPTER 1. Postmodern chasms: the Politics of inequality -- CHAPTER 2. Theorizing race: the challenge of black progress, diversity, and decline -- CHAPTER 3. Black families: beyond revisionist scholarship -- Chapter4. Love, sex, and relationships: the pursuit of intimacy -- Chapter 5 In search of the village: black motherhood in transition -- Chapter 6 Socializing black children: The impact of social class -- Chapter 7 Gendered violence: racial oppression and the assault on black women -- Chapter 8 Resolutions: broadening the vision of liberation -- --; Ch. 1; Postmodern chasms : the politics of inequality --; Ch. 2; Theorizing race : the challenges of black progress, diversity, and decline --; Ch. 3; Black families : beyond revisionist scholarship --; Ch. 4; Love, sex, and relationships : the pursuit of intimacy --; Ch. 5; In search of the village : black motherhood in transition --; Ch. 6; Socializing black children : the impact of social class --; Ch. 7; Gendered violence : racial oppression and the assault on black women --; Ch. 8; Resolutions : broadening the vision of liberation N2 - "In Black Intimacies: A Gender Perspective on Families and Relationships, Shirley A. Hill applies a gender lens to the multiple systems of oppression that have shaped the lives of African American women and men. She challenges the image of a monolithic black population, a legacy of the civil rights movement that she argues is impossible to sustain in the postmodern era. This book will be useful to students and instructors of African American Studies, Gender Studies, Sociology, Anthropology, Marriage and Family, and Social Work."--Jacket; "In Black Intimacies: A Gender Perspective on Families and Relationships, Shirley A. Hill applies a gender lens to the multiple systems of oppression that have shaped the lives of African American women and men. She challenges the image of a monolithic black population, a legacy of the civil rights movement that she argues is impossible to sustain in the postmodern era. This book will be useful to students and instructors of African American Studies, Gender Studies, Sociology, Anthropology, Marriage and Family, and Social Work."--BOOK JACKET ER -