“Looking Behind the Stereotypes of the ‘Angry Black
Woman’: An Exploration of Black Women's Responses to
Interracial Relationships,” published in Gender and Society
in August 2005, was an effort to bring those voices routinely marginalized
or ignored into the debate on contemporary interracial relationships. In
2004, I was writing Navigating Interracial Borders: Black-White
Couples and Their Social Worlds (2005), the
culmination of years of qualitative research on societal responses to
interracial relationships and the opposition that still exists toward
Black-White relationships in White and Black communities. In my research,
as well as previous research on interracial relationships, couples
consisting of Black men and White women would recount stories of
“angry Black women” who harassed them, “rolled their
eyes” at them, and were constructed as a “problem.”
These stories are the ones most often heard because most studies of
Black-White couples consisted of more Black-man/White-woman couplings,
given that they are more common than are Black-women/White-man
couplings. Similarly, numerous quantitative studies posit Black women as
the least accepting of interracial unions. For my work, I was also
analyzing media and film images of interracial unions using films such as
Waiting to Exhale (1995) and Jungle Fever (1991), which
depict scenes of a group of Black women lamenting the loss of Black men to
interracial dating, among other things. From all of these various academic
and popular culture sources, the message was clear that Black women are
generally opposed to interracial relationships, but very rarely are their
own voices actually heard. Instead, at best, their stories have been
retold.