Jim Crow's Legacy: Segregation Stress Syndrome

This dissertation is based on a qualitative research project that documents the experiences of nearly 100 elderly African Americans who lived in the total institution of Jim Crow. The collective long lasting psychological effects connected with the racial violence that occurred in the total institut...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Thompson-Miller, Ruth
Other Authors: Feagin, Joe
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2011-05-9215
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-ETD-TAMU-2011-05-92152013-01-08T10:43:52ZJim Crow's Legacy: Segregation Stress SyndromeThompson-Miller, Ruthtotal institution of Jim Crowracial violencesegregation stress syndrometraumacollective traumaThis dissertation is based on a qualitative research project that documents the experiences of nearly 100 elderly African Americans who lived in the total institution of Jim Crow. The collective long lasting psychological effects connected with the racial violence that occurred in the total institution are a critical aspect. In the interviews African Americans shared how on a daily basis they found themselves dealing with anxiety, fear, humiliation, shame, and stress. The narratives were analyzed utilizing the extended case method. The dissertation documents and explores symptoms of a "segregation stress syndrome" for the chronic, enduring, extremely painful experiences and responses to the total institution of Jim Crow that are indicated by numerous respondents in this research project. Preliminary findings indicate that the symptoms of "segregation stress syndrome" are similar to PTSD symptoms documented in psychiatric literature. However, "segregation stress syndrome" differs from PTSD because the traumatic experience was not a one-time occurrence; it was sustained, over time, in African American communities. In addition, the racial violence that occurred was a form of systematic chronic stress, the type that has been shown to have a detrimental impact on a person's psychological well-being. Lastly, the historical and collective trauma that ensued has contributed to an intergenerational aspect of "segregation stress syndrome." The intergenerational aspect predisposes some younger African Americans to psychological damage, stress, and trauma even though contemporary forms of racial violence are seemingly less damaging.Feagin, Joe2012-07-16T15:56:57Z2012-07-16T20:25:56Z2012-07-16T15:56:57Z2012-07-16T20:25:56Z2011-052012-07-16May 2011thesistextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2011-05-9215en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic total institution of Jim Crow
racial violence
segregation stress syndrome
trauma
collective trauma
spellingShingle total institution of Jim Crow
racial violence
segregation stress syndrome
trauma
collective trauma
Thompson-Miller, Ruth
Jim Crow's Legacy: Segregation Stress Syndrome
description This dissertation is based on a qualitative research project that documents the experiences of nearly 100 elderly African Americans who lived in the total institution of Jim Crow. The collective long lasting psychological effects connected with the racial violence that occurred in the total institution are a critical aspect. In the interviews African Americans shared how on a daily basis they found themselves dealing with anxiety, fear, humiliation, shame, and stress. The narratives were analyzed utilizing the extended case method. The dissertation documents and explores symptoms of a "segregation stress syndrome" for the chronic, enduring, extremely painful experiences and responses to the total institution of Jim Crow that are indicated by numerous respondents in this research project. Preliminary findings indicate that the symptoms of "segregation stress syndrome" are similar to PTSD symptoms documented in psychiatric literature. However, "segregation stress syndrome" differs from PTSD because the traumatic experience was not a one-time occurrence; it was sustained, over time, in African American communities. In addition, the racial violence that occurred was a form of systematic chronic stress, the type that has been shown to have a detrimental impact on a person's psychological well-being. Lastly, the historical and collective trauma that ensued has contributed to an intergenerational aspect of "segregation stress syndrome." The intergenerational aspect predisposes some younger African Americans to psychological damage, stress, and trauma even though contemporary forms of racial violence are seemingly less damaging.
author2 Feagin, Joe
author_facet Feagin, Joe
Thompson-Miller, Ruth
author Thompson-Miller, Ruth
author_sort Thompson-Miller, Ruth
title Jim Crow's Legacy: Segregation Stress Syndrome
title_short Jim Crow's Legacy: Segregation Stress Syndrome
title_full Jim Crow's Legacy: Segregation Stress Syndrome
title_fullStr Jim Crow's Legacy: Segregation Stress Syndrome
title_full_unstemmed Jim Crow's Legacy: Segregation Stress Syndrome
title_sort jim crow's legacy: segregation stress syndrome
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2011-05-9215
work_keys_str_mv AT thompsonmillerruth jimcrowslegacysegregationstresssyndrome
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