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LIVING WITHIN THE VEIL:

How Black Mothers with Daughters Attending Predominantly White Schools Experience Racial Battle Fatigue When Combating Racial Microaggressions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 December 2018

Chasity Bailey-Fakhoury*
Affiliation:
Educational Foundations Department, College of Education, Grand Valley State University
Donald Mitchell Jr.
Affiliation:
Higher Education Leadership Department, Annsley Frazier Thornton School of Education, Bellarmine University
*
*Corresponding author: Chasity Bailey-Fakhoury, Ph.D., Educational Foundations Department, College of Education, Grand Valley State University, 401 W. Fulton, Grand Rapids, MI, 49504. Email: [email protected]

Abstract

Using data from a mixed methods study with suburban Detroit, middle-class mothers as participants, we explore the relationship between racial microaggressions and the racial battle fatigue experienced by Black mothers with young daughters attending predominantly White schools. We find that Black mothers are regularly subjected to racial microaggressions by the White teachers, administrators, and parents with whom they interact. When experiencing slights, insults, and indignities, mothers report taking direct action—borne from African American motherwork—to combat the racial microaggressions. In the context of predominantly White schools, Black mothers enact aesthetic presence, maintain a visible presence, and are strategic in their interactions with school personnel. Racial battle fatigue is evident as they experience and combat racial microaggressions. To extend understanding of racial microaggressions, we apply the sociological concept of the Du Boisian Veil to our analysis. We discuss how the Veil—a barrier which protects the Black psyche by grounding the racialized self while simultaneously precluding racial equality by sustaining racial oppression—can induce the racial battle fatigue that is manifested when one is deluged by racial microaggressions.

Type
State of the Art
Copyright
Copyright © Hutchins Center for African and African American Research 2018 

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