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“Mommy, I am going to be a lawyer when I grow up” I said as I sat on the edge of my mommy’s bed, swinging my legs. For my birthday she bought me a Barbie dressed in a suit with stiletto heels. Her accessories included a briefcase and a pink sports car. That same year I changed my future profession to a medical doctor. I had seen the commercials on television for a Doctor Barbie with a transforming life-size doctor’s bag and stethoscope. The case transformed into a hospital room with all the medical instruments for future Doctor Barbie surgeries. I knew what I wanted for Christmas.
Racism and sexism are two of the most common “isms” in society. Both of these “isms” have only been camouflaged by pushing diversity and feminist programs to satisfactory standards to silence the cries of minorities and women alike. In corporate America, women are faced with the “old boys network” and sexual harassment. But there is still one element exceeding beyond manhood versus womanhood—race. “During the nineteenth century…most white male students received their higher education at one institution, and the women and Blacks fortunate enough even to go to college got their education at another” (1996, 148). Does this strong representation mean that women are accepted as equal? The proclamation of womanhood exists, but the acceptance is treated as conditional and noteworthy as a Lazy Susan. Situations and circumstances of equality are picked according to gender. Corporate America puts limitations on the woman by giving her just enough power to satisfy her ambition in a predominantly male atmosphere. The film industry stunts talented women from reaching their full potential as a producer and/or director. There are women who still write behind a pen alias in order to be published or recognized as credible. Women feel they must expose flesh in the music industry in order to be heard. WNBA has restrictions and politics claim women are too emotional to be great leaders. Imagine the ever-reaching hand of a woman attempting to achieve a successful position or gain respect in her chosen profession, but never really grasp hold of it because it is presented as an illusion. Now imagine that same hand that of a black woman.
Wilson, Midge and Russell, Kathy. Bridging the Gap Between Black Women and White Women: Divided Sisters. New York: Anchor Books, 1996. Hill Collins, Patricia. Black Feminist Though: Knowledge, Consciousness and the Politics of Empowerment. London: Routledge, 1991. |
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