Recapturing Communicative Erasure: Black Women Farmers’ Lived Experience, Political Voice and Cultural Knowledge as Critical Health Communication Praxis
Publication Date
1-1-2024
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Health Communication
DOI
10.1080/10410236.2024.2328919
Abstract
In this paper, we conduct a case study analysis of the National Women in Agriculture Association (NWIAA), an international, Black women-led farm assistance organization founded in 2008 and based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Drawing on the Culture-Centered Approach (CCA) and grounded in interviews and observational fieldwork, we center the perspectives of NWIAA chapter leaders (n = 16) to examine how they describe motivations for farming, challenge power inequities, engage with intersectional barriers, and develop locally situated solutions across agricultural and community health contexts. The analysis argues that Black women farmer’s historical lived experiences, political voice, and shared deep-rooted agricultural knowledge provide an innovative and emancipatory praxis for rethinking health communication intervention approaches that address food system-generated disparities. This study contributes important takeaways for health communication practitioners, policymakers, and advocates addressing food inequities. It extends the CCA as a first step in developing community-driven, context-specific food insecurity health communication interventions within marginalized communities across the United States and beyond.
Department
Public Health and Recreation
Recommended Citation
Andrew Carter, Garrett Broad, and Vanessa Reeves. "Recapturing Communicative Erasure: Black Women Farmers’ Lived Experience, Political Voice and Cultural Knowledge as Critical Health Communication Praxis" Health Communication (2024). https://doi.org/10.1080/10410236.2024.2328919