2003
DOI: 10.1023/a:1024696022407
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Cited by 46 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Researchers have emphasized the need to take into account individuals’ ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds when formulating models of feminist identity (e.g., Boisnier 2003; Henley et al 1998; Moradi et al 2002; Robnett et al 2011). Accordingly, we tested whether ethnic-minority status (controlling for parents’ education) moderated any of the hypothesized effects on feminist self-identification.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Researchers have emphasized the need to take into account individuals’ ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds when formulating models of feminist identity (e.g., Boisnier 2003; Henley et al 1998; Moradi et al 2002; Robnett et al 2011). Accordingly, we tested whether ethnic-minority status (controlling for parents’ education) moderated any of the hypothesized effects on feminist self-identification.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Feminism is a complex construct that involves multiple definitions and corresponding identities (see Aronson 2003; Henley et al 1998). The kinds of factors that lead women to identify as radical feminists, liberal feminists, cultural feminists, or womanists may vary (e.g., Boisnier 2003; Nelson et al 2008; Robnett et al 2011). This point is also pertinent when considering the intersection between gender and race/ethnicity because many women of color may be more likely to identify as womanists and to disidentify as feminists (Aronson 2003; Harnois 2005; Myaskovsky and Wittig 1997).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Helms (as cited in Ossana, Helms, & Leonard, 1992) developed a womanist identity development model in which "healthy" development culminates in a woman valuing herself in her chosen role, whether or not that role includes the identity and beliefs of a feminist. Boisnier (2003) found that the womanist identity model fit Black female college students' identity development better than a feminist identity development model, demonstrating that feminist values and ideals may not always reflect those of women of color. These findings support the contention that Downing and Roush's (1985) feminist identity development may not fully capture the experiences of women of color and those with other diverse identities.…”
Section: Feminist Identity and Well-beingmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Future researchers may wish to explore the roles of these particular coping mechanisms in the relation between discrimination and mental health outcomes among diverse groups of women. Prior research suggests that feminist identity may also develop and manifest differently for women with other marginalized identities such as sexual minority (DeBlaere et al, 2017), Black womanist-identified (Boisnier, 2003), and Latina women (Flores, Carrubba, & Good, 2006). Researchers may wish to examine how women who hold these particular identities choose coping strategies that are influenced by their feminist and intersecting identities.…”
Section: Strengths Limitations and Future Directionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A couple of sociological studies concentrated on the relationship between race and the development of a feminist identity (Boisnier, 2003;Winkle-Wagner, 2008). Henry, West, and Jackson (2010) advanced a theoretical argument that Black college women's association with hip-hop culture might reflect their development of a womanist (a kind of feminism) identity and the rejection of negative images of Black women.…”
Section: Sociological Studies Of Black Women's College Successmentioning
confidence: 99%