Question

Keep Your "N" in Check: African American Women and the Interactive Effects of Etiquette and Emotional Labor", Marlese Durr and Adia M. Harvey Wingfield
Durr and Harvey Wingfield first begin with an examination of negative perceptions of Michelle Obama, and how the stereotype of the "angry Black woman" reinforces a lack of femininity and self worth. This is then extrapolated to experiences of Black women in the modern office workplace, and the role they have been forced into as a side effect of affirmative action policies. The authors discuss the need for a specific form of presentation, titled emotional labor, as a way in which they must present specifically in a largely passive manner. The focus then is to appear as quiet and non-intrusive as possible, leaving them without any identity of their own and undermining the superficial push for diversity that many organizations are highly focused upon.
Most of the Black women interviewed about their workplace reported that they were discouraged from
a. Speaking their mind
b. Avoiding conversations
c. Not participating in meetings
d. all of these choices are correct

Answer

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