mammy$513580$ - vertaling naar grieks
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mammy$513580$ - vertaling naar grieks

ARCHETYPAL STOCK CHARACTER OF A ROTUND, HOMELY, AND MATRONLY BLACK WOMAN
Mammy (archetype); Old auntie; Old Auntie; Mammy Archetype; Black mammy; Mammie; Mammy archetype; Mammy archetype in the United States; Mammy figure; Black mammy figure
  • Image of [[Aunt Priscilla]] and text in [[dialect]] from ''The Baltimore Sun,'' 1921
  • Edgar Martin's ''Boots and Her Buddies'' (March 21, 1926)
  • Mammy [[figurine]]s in the [[Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia]]
  • "[[Mammy's Cupboard]]", 1940 [[novelty architecture]] restaurant in [[Adams County, Mississippi]]
  • 1909 advertisement for [[Aunt Jemima]] pancake mix in the ''New York Tribune,'' featuring a [[rag doll]] family at bottom right
  • access-date=June 2, 2013}}</ref>
  • issn=0362-4331}}</ref> 1923

mammy      
n. μαμά, μητερούλα, μαύρη παραμάνα

Definitie

mammy
(mammies)
In some dialects of English, mammy is used to mean mother. (INFORMAL)
N-FAMILY

Wikipedia

Mammy stereotype

A mammy is a U.S. historical stereotype depicting black women who work in a white family and nurse the family's children. The fictionalized mammy character is often visualized as a fat, dark-skinned woman with a motherly personality. The origin of the mammy figure stereotype is rooted in the history of slavery in the United States, as black slave women were often tasked with domestic and childcare work in white American slaveholding households. The mammy caricature was used to create a narrative of black women being happy within slavery or within a role of servitude. The mammy stereotype associates black women with domestic roles and it has been argued it, combined with segregation and discrimination, limited job opportunities for black women during the Jim Crow era, approximately 1877 to 1966.