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Chapter 2 Signifying Incest African-American Revisions

Chapter 2 Signifying IncestAfrican- american RevisionsAs we have already seen, the dominant nineteenth-century Incest story workedto construct the virtues of the white middle class, embodied in the strong patri-arch, in opposition to those whose narratives about Incest only con rmed theirimmorality: young girls, the poor, and racialized others who are understood tobe sexually deviant. The culturally dominant story, then, made it easy for theprosperous and white to understand Incest as a problem of the poor and way of understanding Incest is related to another similarly powerful anddeeply wounding narrative that has also found sexual aberration in blackfamilies, which are themselves described as aberrant.

This way of understanding incest is related to another similarly powerful and deeply wounding narrative that has also found sexual “aberration” in black families, which are themselves described as aberrant. Maxine Baca Zinn describes this narrative about the dysfunctional black family as based on a “cul-

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