Department of Family Science, School of Public Health, University of Maryland, 255 Valley Drive, College Park, MD 20742, USA.
Am J Community Psychol. 2010 Mar;45(1-2):139-54. doi: 10.1007/s10464-009-9282-4.
In this analysis, we explore how low-income African American fathers build understandings of successful manhood in the context of community-based responsible fatherhood programs. Drawing on life history interviews with 75 men in Illinois and Indiana, we explore men's attempts to fulfill normative expectations of fatherhood while living in communities with limited resources. We examine the efforts of community-based fatherhood programs to shape alternative African American masculinities through facilitation of personal turning points and "breaks with the past," use of social support and institutional interventions, and the reframing of provision as a priority of successful fatherhood. We refer to Connell's hegemonic masculinity framework (Connell in Masculinities, Polity Press, Cambridge, 1995) and discuss how both men and programs borrow from hegemonic and street masculinities to develop alternative approaches to paternal involvement for marginalized men.
在本分析中,我们探讨了低收入非裔美国父亲如何在社区为基础的负责任的父亲项目的背景下,建立对成功男子气概的理解。通过对伊利诺伊州和印第安纳州的 75 名男性进行生活史访谈,我们探讨了男性在资源有限的社区中生活时,试图满足父道规范期望的情况。我们考察了社区为基础的父亲项目通过促进个人转折点和“与过去决裂”、利用社会支持和机构干预以及将提供重新定义为成功父亲的优先事项,来塑造替代非裔美国男子气概的努力。我们参考了康奈尔的霸权男子气概框架(Connell 在《男子气概》,剑桥大学出版社,1995 年),并讨论了男性和项目如何借鉴霸权和街头男子气概,为边缘化男性发展参与父道的替代方法。