"Like Men They Stood": Black Male Vulnerability as Resistance to Stereotypes in Fiction Written by African American Women




Kolehmainen, Tuula

PublisherBRILL

2025

European Perspectives on the United States

14

978-90-04-74635-0

978-90-04-74636-7

2666-724X

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1163/9789004746367



What if vulnerability could reshape how we understand Black masculinity? “Like Men They Stood” reveals how late twentieth-century African American women authors represent Black men in ways that disrupt familiar readings of their portrayals as purely stereotypical. Through reframed interpretations, the book uncovers how Toni Cade Bambara, Alice Walker, Toni Morrison, and Gloria Naylor deploy Black male vulnerability as a powerful mode of resistance, troubling public and literary debates of stereotypical depictions of Black men in their fiction. By bringing Black male studies into dialogue with Black feminist and womanist thought, “Like Men They Stood” opens new ways of interpreting race, gender, and power in African American literature—and invites you to rethink how Black masculinity is represented, read, and understood.



The completion of this volume was supported by the Turku University Foundation


Last updated on 18/12/2025 10:27:32 AM