How Race, Gender And Fatigue Have Affected The Coverage Of Renisha McBride's Death | HuffPost - Action News
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Posted: 2014-07-24T18:30:08Z | Updated: 2014-07-24T18:59:03Z How Race, Gender And Fatigue Have Affected The Coverage Of Renisha McBride's Death | HuffPost

How Race, Gender And Fatigue Have Affected The Coverage Of Renisha McBride's Death

Renisha McBride, Trayvon Martin And How Race & Gender Have Affected Coverage
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It's no secret -- the Trayvon Martin and Renisha McBride killings have striking similarities. Both were young black victims and in each case, the killers claimed self-defense. But despite the parallels, it appears that the two cases are being treated differently -- even within the black community.

Although the Martin case elicited strong opinions and outrage from various communities, these same circles seem to have stayed quiet about McBride.

I havent seen a lot about this in my newsfeed. I havent seen a lot of people posting about Renisha, said Brittney Cooper, Assistant Professor of Womens and Gender Studies and Africana Studies at Rutgers University.

As Cooper explained in a recent HuffPost Live conversation, much of the reactionary difference could be explained by the sheer number of African American killings that have taken place recently.

A lot of its fatigue. I mean were all heartbroken this week over the killing of eric garner last week, she told host Marc Lamont Hill. So, you know, its like every other week weve got somebody else being hemmed up by the police. Two weeks before that it was the detaining of Ursula Orr and slamming her on the ground in Arizona she said.

Fatigue aside, there may be another reason that could explain why McBrides story hasnt had the same impression that Martin's did.

While there is a historical narrative that shows black men have faced violence from their white counterparts, we dont often acknowledge that black women have these violent encounters with white folks too, Cooper said. I dont know that we know how to think about, fully, what happens when the kind of violence that wed usually think would happen to a black man, then happens to black women.

But the question of gender in McBrides situation runs even deeper.

Studies show that black women are frequently misperceived as black men or are often thought to be masculine and stronger than they actually are physically, Cooper said. So theres all kinds of stuff here going on about the misperceptions of femininity.

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