Information for "Sassy Black Woman"

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Display titleSassy Black Woman
Default sort keySassy Black Woman
Page length (in bytes)24,464
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Page ID13583
Page content languageen - English
Page content modelwikitext
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Page imageBlack-woman-attitude 4523.jpg

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Page creatorprefix>Import Bot
Date of page creation21:27, 1 November 2013
Latest editorHeneryVII (talk | contribs)
Date of latest edit02:16, 12 February 2024
Total number of edits19
Recent number of edits (within past 180 days)1
Recent number of distinct authors1

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Since the era of Jim Crow, black people could be more outspoken—to a point, particularly if they were female. To illustrate this, Sassy "Mammy" figures could scold the family they worked for and playfully berate their employers (to show that Blacks were not being oppressed). As the Civil Rights movement came up in the 60s, black people in media could be more outspoken. And because of feminism, the same thing applied for women. Combine these, and you get the sassy black woman. It started with the heroines of Blaxploitation movies, like Coffy and Foxy Brown (both played by Pam Grier), and continued into the 1980s.
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