The Color of Love: Racial Features, Stigma, and Socialization in Black Brazilian Families

The Color of Love: Racial Features, Stigma, and Socialization in Black Brazilian Families

by Elizabeth Hordge-Freeman
The Color of Love: Racial Features, Stigma, and Socialization in Black Brazilian Families

The Color of Love: Racial Features, Stigma, and Socialization in Black Brazilian Families

by Elizabeth Hordge-Freeman

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Overview

Winner, Section on the Sociology of Emotions Outstanding Recent Contribution (Book) Award, American Sociological Association, 2016
Charles Horton Cooley Award for Recent Book, Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction, 2017
Best Publication Award, Section on Body and Embodiment, American Sociological Association (ASA), 2018

The Color Of Love reveals the power of racial hierarchies to infiltrate our most intimate relationships. Delving far deeper than previous sociologists have into the black Brazilian experience, Elizabeth Hordge-Freeman examines the relationship between racialization and the emotional life of a family. Based on interviews and a sixteen-month ethnography of ten working-class Brazilian families, this provocative work sheds light on how families simultaneously resist and reproduce racial hierarchies. Examining race and gender, Hordge-Freeman illustrates the privileges of whiteness by revealing how those with “blacker” features often experience material and emotional hardships. From parental ties, to sibling interactions, to extended family and romantic relationships, the chapters chart new territory by revealing the connection between proximity to whiteness and the distribution of affection within families.

Hordge-Freeman also explores how black Brazilian families, particularly mothers, rely on diverse strategies that reproduce, negotiate, and resist racism. She frames efforts to modify racial features as sometimes reflecting internalized racism, and at other times as responding to material and emotional considerations. Contextualizing their strategies within broader narratives of the African diaspora, she examines how Salvador’s inhabitants perceive the history of the slave trade itself in a city that is referred to as the “blackest” in Brazil. She argues that racial hierarchies may orchestrate family relationships in ways that reflect and reproduce racial inequality, but black Brazilian families actively negotiate these hierarchies to assert their citizenship and humanity.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781477307908
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Publication date: 10/30/2015
Series: Louann Atkins Temple Women & Culture Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 311
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

ELIZABETH HORDGE-FREEMAN, a 2015–2016 Fulbright Scholar, is an assistant professor of sociology with a joint appointment in the Institute for the Study of Latin America & the Caribbean at the University of South Florida.

Table of Contents

  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction. The Face of a Slave
  • Part I. Socialization and Stigma
    • Chapter 1. What's Love Got to Do with It? Racial Stigma and Embodied Capital
    • Chapter 2. Black Bodies, White Casts: Racializing and Gendering Bodies
    • Chapter 3. Home Is Where the Hurt Is: Affective Capital, Stigma, and Racialization
  • Part II. Racial Socialization and Negotiations in Public Culture
    • Chapter 4. Racial Fluency: Reading between and beyond the Color Lines
    • Chapter 5. Mind Your Blackness: Embodied Capital and Spatial Mobility
    • Chapter 6. Antiracism in Transgressive Families
  • Conclusion. The Ties That Bind
  • Appendix A: Research Methods and Positionality
  • Appendix B: Major Interview Topics
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index

What People are Saying About This

Patricia de Santana Pinho

"A page-turner. The humanity that leaps out of the pages makes this book deeply touching and appealing. This is a project that takes emotion seriously and looks at affection as a realm that needs to be studied if we want to understand racialization."

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