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Intersectional Identities and the Politics of Altruistic Care in a Low-Income, Urban Community
Authors:Jacqueline S Mattis  Nyasha A Grayman  Sheri-Ann Cowie  Cynthia Winston  Carolyn Watson  Daisy Jackson
Institution:1. Department of Applied Psychology, New York University, 239 Greene Street, 4th Floor, 10003, New York, NY, USA
2. University of Delaware, Newark, DE, USA
3. Howard University, Washington, DC, USA
Abstract:The literatures on the ways in which social identity and social position (e.g., gender, class, race) inform altruism have developed orthogonally. In this community-based qualitative study we use intersectionality theory to explore the complex ways in which social identity and social structures jointly influence altruism among African American adults (n?=?40) in an urban, economically distressed housing community in New York City. Content analysis of participants’ narratives reveals the ways in which gender, race, ethnicity, class, age, and urbanicity work in tandem to create differential patterns of vulnerability, differential needs, differential commitments to caring for particular subgroups, and informs how altruists are perceived by others. The implications of this work for future research on altruism are highlighted.
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