TY - JOUR
T1 - Intersections at a (Heteronormative) crossroad
T2 - Gender and sexuality among black students’ spiritual-and-religious narratives
AU - McGuire, Keon
AU - Cisneros, Jesus
AU - Mcguire, T. Donté
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017, Johns Hopkins University Press. All rights reserved.
PY - 2017/3
Y1 - 2017/3
N2 - Historically, many Blacks deployed religion as a subversive ideological tool, such as within the struggle against the dehumanizing, yet constitutionally authorized system of slavery as well as the state-sponsored and -sanctioned violence of lynching, voting restrictions and segregation. Even contemporarily, a growing body of empirical evidence shows that religion and spirituality matter in the lives of Black undergraduate students, informing their vocational choices, coping capacities, and styles and enhancing psychological resistance to racial stress. Though higher education researchers are becoming increasingly attentive to American college students’ spiritual lives, fewer scholars have invested equitable energies in better understanding Black students’ spiritual and religious experiences as well as exploring the form and content of Black undergraduates’ spiritual identities. Thus, the research questions that guided our study were the following: (a) What factors influence students’ spiritual identities prior to and during college? and (b) How are students’ spiritual identities raced and gendered and interact with their sexual identities? We report findings focused specifically on the social mechanisms—and their attendant ideologies— that coproduce students’ spiritual identities as well as students’ agentive negotiations.
AB - Historically, many Blacks deployed religion as a subversive ideological tool, such as within the struggle against the dehumanizing, yet constitutionally authorized system of slavery as well as the state-sponsored and -sanctioned violence of lynching, voting restrictions and segregation. Even contemporarily, a growing body of empirical evidence shows that religion and spirituality matter in the lives of Black undergraduate students, informing their vocational choices, coping capacities, and styles and enhancing psychological resistance to racial stress. Though higher education researchers are becoming increasingly attentive to American college students’ spiritual lives, fewer scholars have invested equitable energies in better understanding Black students’ spiritual and religious experiences as well as exploring the form and content of Black undergraduates’ spiritual identities. Thus, the research questions that guided our study were the following: (a) What factors influence students’ spiritual identities prior to and during college? and (b) How are students’ spiritual identities raced and gendered and interact with their sexual identities? We report findings focused specifically on the social mechanisms—and their attendant ideologies— that coproduce students’ spiritual identities as well as students’ agentive negotiations.
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U2 - 10.1353/csd.2017.0014
DO - 10.1353/csd.2017.0014
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85015745663
SN - 0897-5264
VL - 58
SP - 175
EP - 197
JO - Journal of College Student Development
JF - Journal of College Student Development
IS - 2
ER -