Katrina, Black Women, and the Deadly Discourse on Black Poverty in America (original) (raw)

UNEARTHING IGNORANCE: Hurricane Katrina and the Re-Envisioning of the Urban Black Poor

Alford Young

Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race, 2006

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Recovery & Recognition: Black Women and the Lower Ninth Ward

Jamesia King

2011

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GET TO THE BRICKS The Experiences of Black Women from New Orleans Public Housing after Hurricane Katrina

Jane Henrici

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Feeling the Pain of My People: Hurricane Katrina, Racial Inequality, and the Psyche of Black America

Kristin Wylie

Journal of Black Studies, 2007

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Women in New Orleans: Race, Poverty, and Hurricane Katrina

Jane Henrici, Institute for Womens Policy Research

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Hurricane Katrina and the Racial Gulf: A Du Boisian Analysis of Victims’ Experiences

Cedric Herring

Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race , 2006

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Women, Disasters, and Hurricane Katrina

Jane Henrici, Institute for Womens Policy Research

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“I have a right not to be resilient”: New Orleanians of color respond to Hurricane Katrina

Simi Kang

The Migrationist, 2018

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“Waiting for the White Man to Fix Things:” Rebuilding Black Poverty in New Orleans

Katherine Maurer

Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare, 2012

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Katrina and the Banshee's Wail: The Racialization of Class Exploitation

Alice Robert

2007

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A Katrina Trilogy: Estrangement, Empowerment, and Social Justice

Dr Marva L Lewis

Reflections: Narratives of Professional Helping (Click on Current or Archives; Registration Optional), 2007

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This Day, We Use Our Energy for Revolution: Black Feminist Ethics of Survival, Struggle, and Renewal in the new New Orleans

Laura McTighe

2017

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The Wake and the Work of Culture: Memorialization Practices in Post-Katrina Black Feminist Poetics

Samantha Pinto

2019

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Displacement, gender, and the challenges of parenting after Hurricane Katrina

Lori Peek

2008

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“Say It Loud, I’m Black and I’m Proud”: Organizing Since Katrina

Diane Harriford

Fast Capitalism, 2008

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Through the eye of Katrina: social justice in the United States

Emmanuel David

Choice Reviews Online, 2008

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Compassion and Katrina: Reasserting violent White masculinity after the storm

Kate Lockwood Harris

Women & Language, 2011

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WORLDS APART: Blacks and Whites React to Hurricane Katrina

Leonie Huddy

Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race, 2006

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Hurricane Katrina, Family Trouble, and the Micro-politics of Suffering

daina harvey

Social Indicators Research Series, 2015

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Race, Poverty, and Policy in the Wake of Disaster: Post-Katrina Views

Carl L Bankston

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"Studying Up" On Women and Disaster: An Elite Sustained Women’s Group Following Hurricane Katrina

Emmanuel David

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Review of Race, Place, and Environmental Justice after Hurricane Katrina: Struggles to Reclaim, Rebuild, and Revitalize New Orleans and the Gulf Coast

Lori Peek

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‘Came hell and high water’: the intersection of Hurricane Katrina, the news media, race and poverty

Douglas D Perkins

Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, 2007

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Is it Easy Living in the Big Easy?: Examining the Lives of African American Emerging Adults in the Aftermath of Hurricane Katrina

Farrah G . Cambrice

Is It Easly living in the Big Easy , 2015

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The Survivor: Coping with Disaster and Memory in Louisiana after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita

Jacques Henry, Sara Le Menestrel

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Katrina's Imprint: Race and Vulnerability in America

Lynn Weber

Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews, 2011

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Reading Hurricane Katrina: Race, Class, and the Biopolitics of Disposability

Henry Giroux

College Literature, 2006

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Front Porch Revolution: Resilience Space, Demonic Grounds, and the Horizons of a Black Feminist Otherwise

Laura McTighe

Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 2018

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Bad Elements: Katrina and the Scoured Landscape of Social Reproduction

Cindi Katz

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Apocalypse: The media’s framing of black looters, shooters, and brutes in Hurricane Katrina’s Aftermath.

Kathleen Haspel

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DIVERSIFYING THE DIALOGUE POST-KATRINA: RACE, PLACE, AND DISPLACEMENT IN NEW ORLEANS, U.S.A.

Antoinette Jackson

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The ‘Murky’ New Orleans: A community reliving and experiencing the 2005 Hurricane Katrina

Alice Ncube

Jàmbá: Journal of Disaster Risk Studies

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RefugeeǀCitizen: Mediating Testimony through Image and Word in the Wake of Hurricane Katrina

Leigh Gilmore

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Picturing Katrina: The queer child and black death-birthing narratives

Kimberly C Welch

Cultural Dynamics, 2020

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“Before the Storm”: Hurricane Katrina, the BP Oil Spill, and the Challenges to Racial Hierarchies in Rural Louisiana

Seumas Bates

Nature and Culture, 2017

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