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Journal of Black Studies, Vol. 36, No. 2, 264-281 (2005)
DOI: 10.1177/0021934704273152

Black Womanhood: Essence and its Treatment of Stereotypical Images of Black Women

Jennifer Bailey Woodard

Middle Tennessee State University

Teresa Mastin

Michigan State University

One could assume it is a given that Essencemagazine dispels stereotypical images of Black women and that it works to liberate them from the strictures imposed on them by a world in which they live as an undervalued and marginalized minority. After all, this is the only longstanding women’s magazine that targets Black women and addresses specifically their cultural and emotional needs as African Americans and women. This content analysis examines whether Essenceworks as a liberating feminist text that dispels, as opposed to validates, stereotypical images of Black women. We hypothesize that (a) there will be more evidence to dispel the stereotypes than to perpetuate them and (b) that of the four major African American women stereotypes—mammy, matriarch, sexual siren, and welfare mother or queen—the matriarch and sexual siren stereotypes will be dispelled more frequently. Results support the former hypothesis entirely and the latter hypothesis partially.

Key Words: Essence magazine • Black women • Black womanhood • Black stereotypes • women stereotypes • Black popular culture


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