H-NET BOOK REVIEW
Published by H-Women@h-net.msu.edu (January, 2000)
Kathleen F. Slevin & C. Ray Wingrove. From Stumbling Blocks to
Stepping Stones: The Life Experiences of Fifty Professional
African American Women. New York: New York University Press,
1998. 187 pp. Appendix, notes, and index. $17.50 (paper), ISBN
0-8147-8100-4.
Reviewed for H-Women by Maxine D. Jones ,
Department of History, Florida State University
Growing up black and female in a segregated and racist United
States does not necessarily translate into working in white
women's kitchens, being on welfare, or finding oneself entrapped
in poverty, though many African American women did indeed fall
into these categories. Their stories have been well documented
in scholarly literature and the media. The average citizen is
more likely to hear of welfare queens bilking the government of
taxpayers' hard earned money than of the African American women
who succeeded in spite of the odds against them. In From
Stumbling Blocks to Stepping Stones: The Life Experiences of
Fifty Professional African American Women, sociologists
Kathleen F. Slevin and C. Ray Wingrove introduce and discuss the
lives of African American women who refused to accept the roles
assigned to them because of their color.
Slevin and Wingrove, two white sociologists, studied the lives
of fifty African American women whom they interviewed in 1993
and 1994. All of the women were retired professionals ranging
in age from fifty-three to eighty-seven. With one exception all
were college educated. Twenty-four earned masters' degrees and
another nine obtained their doctorates. They worked in a
variety of positions--educators, public servants, medicine, and
self-employment. All lived in Virginia and all were intimately
familiar with segregation. The authors attempt to explain the
professional and financial success of these women by
investigating their backgrounds and collective experiences.
The authors examine the lessons these women learned during their
formative years from their families and communities -- lessons
that empowered them not only to resist racism but to survive it.
Examples abound as to how parents and other adults enabled them
to grow into strong and independent women. Parents advised
their daughters to "avoid hurtful whites," to "be the best,"
and to "pick your battles." In addition, parents told them that
they were "as good as anybody else," and to "always be
economically independent" (pp. 25-26). The black community at
large re-enforced the lessons learned at home and prepared the
young women for life in a world that could be cold, threatening,
and uncaring. "Their identities as African American women were
forged within a milieu that stressed the common good, that
accentuated the importance of 'giving back' to one's community,
that showed them that women had a special place in and
responsibility for sustaining the community" (p. 48).
The black church was also important in shaping the women's
lives. One woman claimed "the community came through the door
into the church and the church went out the door into the
community" (p. 51). The church provided more than religious
education. It was the one institution completely controlled by
blacks and it was where black youth received opportunities not
given anywhere else. They found mentors, role models, and a
supportive environment where they could gain leadership skills
and hone their speaking and writing abilities. The church also
served as an important social outlet for black youth. Education
was almost as important as the church. Although not as
independent as the black church, the school was a major
institution in the black community and teachers were highly
respected. In fact, several of the women in this study were
teachers. Slevin and Wingrove relate the tremendous sacrifices
both parents and students made to ensure a good education.
The authors devote the first four chapters to the black family,
community, church and school and describe how these institutions
all worked in conjunction by teaching and re-enforcing the same
morals, values, and survival skills. All four shaped and
prepared the young women included in the volume for the success
they found in a society that discriminated against blacks and
women.
In a chapter entitled "The World of Work: Making it the Hard
Way," the authors describe the environment in which their
subjects worked and how race, class and gender limited their
choices and opportunities. Forty-seven of the fifty women began
their career before the modern civil rights and women's
liberation movements. Those working in an all black environment
found a degree of protection from the glaring racism, but it
usually meant inadequate facilities and supplies, and unequal
salaries. Unfortunately, while working separately from whites
provided a cushion against the racism, it did nothing to
diminish sexism. They suffered in the same manner as white
women working in a white patriarchial environment. The black
women noted that they received less pay for doing more work and
were denied advancement opportunities because of their gender.
The other three women began their professional careers in the
1960s and did not encounter the same degree of racism and
sexism. They benefitted from changes resulting from the women's
rights and civil rights movements of the 1960s and 1970s.
Slevin and Wingrove state that these women "faced fewer
structural constraints, because the most blatant forms of
economic oppression of minorities had been reduced" (p. 116),
yet they conclude that racial and gender discriminations were
real concerns in the work environment of both groups of women.
The difference was in the "extent or degree of discrimination"
(p. 118). In the post 1960s Africans Americans and women were
more likely to openly challenge racism and sexism.
Much of the information gleaned from the first five chapters of
this book is familiar to scholars of African American women's
and African American history. There is no doubt that being
black and female shaped the life and work experiences of the
women involved. However, several of the authors' conclusions
about the lessons these women learned during their formative
years can be applied to black men, white women, and to any
number of minorities.
Slevin and Wingrove make an important contribution in Chapter
Six, "Free at Last: Surviving and Thriving in Retirement." They
challenge sociologist Jacquelyne Jackson's contention that
"older Black American women are resistant to retirement because
it is only in paid work that they can find status and meaning in
their lives" (p. 6). Collectively, the fifty women included in
this work conclude that "life in retirement is good" (p. 123).
Early financial planning allowed them freedom, financial
security, and a comfortable lifestyle. Nevertheless, retirement
did not necessarily mean a life of frivoulous leisure. They
traveled, took continuing education courses, remained involved
in civic, professional and community organizations, and
generally remained active. More important, they continued to
give back to the African American community. The freedom and
flexibility that came with retirement allowed these women to
contribute their knowledge and skills to others. As volunteers
they read to young children, worked with teenagers, and served
as mentors.
Although the women studied were happily retired and considered
themselves privileged, "the long arm of gender and racial
victimization," Slevin and Wingrove contended, still reached
"from their past lives into the present. It is true that they
are privileged, but not as much as they might have been had they
been White and male. Given their educational achievements and
their years in the labor force, they should be even more
financially comfortable and secure than they are" (p. 148).
Slevin and Wingrove are obviously, and rightfully, enamored with
the women they interviewed. They argue that their subjects are
pioneers and should serve as role models for both present and
future generations. It is important to remember, however, that
the fifty women highlighted in From Stumbling Blocks to
Stepping Stones represent literally thousands of women who have
similar stories to tell, women who endured and survived sexism
from their own men, and racism and sexism in the larger
community, and women who worked in white households and were
subject to sexual abuse. They survived because the communities
in which they were reared gave them the tools to do so. What is
it about these women's life stories that make them so different
from thousands of other African American women? How do they
differ from Osceola McCarty, the washer woman, who saved and
contributed more than $100,000 to the University of Southern
Mississippi for the education of black women? The authors, hint
at, but never actually tell us.
Kate Slevin and C. Ray Wingrove seem almost apologetic for being
whites who examine the intimate and personal lives of African
American women. Their attempt, in the appendix, personally to
identify with the racism and sexism experienced by their
subjects diminishes their work. Yet, Slevin and Wingrove have
put together a very readable account of the life and work
experiences of fifty successful African American women. They
carefully examine the factors that led to their success and the
often seemingly insurmountable barriers of race, class and
gender that they had to overcome. They seemed more surprised
with their findings than did this reviewer.
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