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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Rachel A. FeinsteinPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.140kg ISBN: 9781138629684ISBN 10: 1138629685 Pages: 108 Publication Date: 14 August 2018 Audience: General/trade , College/higher education , General , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsDr. Feinstein in When Rape was Legal, combines the use of multiple archival sources with her theoretically informed and insightful analysis of the largely overlooked issue of the rape of enslaved black women by white men. She brings together systemic racism perspectives with scholarship on intersectionality to highlight how the privilege and power of whites was achieved through the sexual exploitation of black women. Dr. Feinsten uniquely adds to our understanding of this topic through bringing to the fore 1) the role of white women as `intermediate groups' that reinforce oppression and 2) how the `intergenerational reproduction of white masculinity' works. This book is essential reading for scholars and students in criminology, sociology, race and ethnic studies, and women's and gender studies. The insights from her careful historical analysis add to our current understanding of violence against women, racial oppression and the perpetuation of privilege and inequality. It also adds to insights on the historical domination of black bodies, and in this case female black bodies, complementing Ta-Neishi Coates' powerful insights in Between the World and Me. Holly Foster, Professor of Sociology, Texas A&M University Rachel Feinstein's book is a must-read for scholars making connections between slavery, Jim Crow, and contemporary issues. Her use of original court records and diaries gives voice to otherwise silenced women, Black and White. She shows how the intergenerational transmission of white masculinity continues to contribute to sexual violence committed against women today. Ruth Thompson-Miller, author, Jim Crow's Legacy: The Lasting Impact of Segregation Feinstein presents powerful and heart-wrenching narratives of commonplace and state-sanctioned sexual terrorism by white males against enslaved Black women. She details the intergenerational transmission of white masculinity, shows how gendered racism fits within the white racial frame, and, important for the current gap in literature it fills, chronicles white women's complicity in white men's rape of enslaved Black women. The narratives in When Rape Was Legal are painful to read, yet Feinstein's analysis is critically important to understand sexual assault and gendered racism today. Leslie Picca, Professor of Sociology, University of Dayton Dr. Feinstein in When Rape was Legal, combines the use of multiple archival sources with her theoretically informed and insightful analysis of the largely overlooked issue of the rape of enslaved black women by white men.ã She brings together systemic racism perspectives with scholarship on intersectionality to highlight how the privilege and power of whites was achieved through the sexual exploitation of black women.ã Dr. Feinsten uniquely adds to our understanding of this topic through bringing to the fore 1) the role of white women as `intermediate groups' that reinforce oppression and 2) how the `intergenerational reproduction of white masculinity' works.ã This book is essential reading for scholars and students in criminology, sociology, race and ethnic studies, and women's and gender studies.ã It brings the insights of a careful historical analysis to inform our current understanding of violence against women, racial oppression, and the perpetuation of privilege and inequality.ã It also adds to insights on the historical domination of black bodies, and in this case female black bodies, complementing Ta-Neishi Coates' powerful insights in Between the World and Me. Holly Foster, Professor of Sociology, Texas A&M University Rachel Feinstein's book is a must-read for scholars making connections between slavery, Jim Crow, and contemporary issues. Her use of original court records and diaries gives voice to otherwise silenced women, Black and White. She shows how the intergenerational transmission of white masculinity continues to contribute to sexual violence committed against women today. Ruth Thompson-Miller, author, Jim Crow's Legacy: The Lasting Impact of Segregation Feinstein presents powerful and heart-wrenching narratives of commonplace and state-sanctioned sexual terrorism by white males against enslaved Black women. She details the intergenerational transmission of white masculinity, shows how gendered racism fits within the white racial frame, and, important for the current gap in literature it fills, chronicles white women's complicity in white men's rape of enslaved Black women. The narratives in When Rape Was Legal are painful to read, yet Feinstein's analysis is critically important to understand sexual assault and gendered racism today. Leslie Picca, Professor of Sociology, University of Dayton Dr. Feinstein in When Rape was Legal, combines the use of multiple archival sources with her theoretically informed and insightful analysis of the largely overlooked issue of the rape of enslaved black women by white men.ã She brings together systemic racism perspectives with scholarship on intersectionality to highlight how the privilege and power of whites was achieved through the sexual exploitation of black women.ã Dr. Feinsten uniquely adds to our understanding of this topic through bringing to the fore 1) the role of white women as `intermediate groups' that reinforce oppression and 2) how the `intergenerational reproduction of white masculinity' works.ã This book is essential reading for scholars and students in criminology, sociology, race and ethnic studies, and women's and gender studies.ã It brings the insights of a careful historical analysis to inform our current understanding of violence against women, racial oppression, and the perpetuation of privilege and inequality.ã It also adds to insights on the historical domination of black bodies, and in this case female black bodies, complementing Ta-Neishi Coates' powerful insights in Between the World and Me. Holly Foster, Professor of Sociology, Texas A&M University Dr. Feinstein in When Rape was Legal, combines the use of multiple archival sources with her theoretically informed and insightful analysis of the largely overlooked issue of the rape of enslaved black women by white men. She brings together systemic racism perspectives with scholarship on intersectionality to highlight how the privilege and power of whites was achieved through the sexual exploitation of black women. Dr. Feinsten uniquely adds to our understanding of this topic through bringing to the fore 1) the role of white women as `intermediate groups' that reinforce oppression and 2) how the `intergenerational reproduction of white masculinity' works. This book is essential reading for scholars and students in criminology, sociology, race and ethnic studies, and women's and gender studies. It brings the insights of a careful historical analysis to inform our current understanding of violence against women, racial oppression, and the perpetuation of privilege and inequality. It also adds to insights on the historical domination of black bodies, and in this case female black bodies, complementing Ta-Neishi Coates' powerful insights in Between the World and Me. Holly Foster, Professor of Sociology, Texas A&M University Rachel Feinstein's book is a must-read for scholars making connections between slavery, Jim Crow, and contemporary issues. Her use of original court records and diaries gives voice to otherwise silenced women, Black and White. She shows how the intergenerational transmission of white masculinity continues to contribute to sexual violence committed against women today. Ruth Thompson-Miller, author, Jim Crow's Legacy: The Lasting Impact of Segregation Feinstein presents powerful and heart-wrenching narratives of commonplace and state-sanctioned sexual terrorism by white males against enslaved Black women. She details the intergenerational transmission of white masculinity, shows how gendered racism fits within the white racial frame, and, important for the current gap in literature it fills, chronicles white women's complicity in white men's rape of enslaved Black women. The narratives in When Rape Was Legal are painful to read, yet Feinstein's analysis is critically important to understand sexual assault and gendered racism today. Leslie Picca, Professor of Sociology, University of Dayton Author InformationRachel A. Feinstein received her Ph.D. in Sociology from Texas A&M University in 2014. She has since worked as Assistant Professor of Sociology and Criminal Justice at Carthage College in Wisconsin, and is currently teaching in the Sociology Department at California State University, Fullerton. Her research, both contemporary and historical, combines Criminology, Race/Ethnicity and Gender Studies, and can be found in several sociology and criminology journals. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |