2020
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17124264
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Eat to Live, Don’t Live to Eat: Black Men, Masculinity, Faith and Food

Abstract: Men often have poorer health outcomes than women. In the United States, Black men in particular tend to have worse health than not only Black women but other racial/ethnic groups of men. One factor that contributes to health is the role of masculinity. Previous research notes that men who cling to hegemonic notions of masculine identity tend to engage in negative health behaviors. However, hegemonic masculinity is not the realm in which Black men exist. Criminalized, surveilled, and subject to structural racis… Show more

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