A Concise Companion to Postcolonial Literature - 2010 - Chew - Feminism and Womanism
A psychocultural exploration of womanism, activism, and social justice
A Theoretical Exposition of Feminism and Womanism in African Context
‘Africana womanism’: Implications for transformative scholarship in occupational science
Africana Womanism and African Feminism: A Philosophical, Literary, and Cosmological Dialectic on Family
Africana womanism: The flip side of a coin
Africanity, Womanism, and Constructive Resilience: Some Reflections
Caribbean Womanism: Decolonial theorizing of Caribbean women’s oppression, survival, and resistance
Claiming/Reclaiming Africana Womanist Literature Texts Throughout the African Diaspora
Conclusion: Toward global womanist and mujerista psychologies
Bioethics—Eleven Approaches
Gender crisis: Feminism versus Womanism in Tess Onwueme’s tell it to women
"I Have to Know Who I Am": An Africana Womanist Analysis of Afro-Brazilian Identity in the Literature of Miriam Alves, Esmeralda Ribeiro and Conceição Evaristo
In Pictures and Words: A Womanist Answer to Addressing the In Pictures and Words: A Womanist Answer to Addressing the Lived Experience of African American Women and Their Lived Experience of African American Women and Their Bodies—A Gumbo of Liberation and Healing Bodies
Introduction: Womanist and Mujerista Psychologies
Listen to Black Women: Do Black Feminist and Womanist Health Policy Analyses
Social movements, community education, and the fight for racial justice: Black women and social transformation
Transformative Learning and the Road to Maternal Leadership
A Concomitant Examination of the Relations of Perceived Racist and Sexist Events to Psychological Distress for African American Women
Perspective in Africana Feminism; Exploring Expressions of Black Feminism/Womanism in the African Diaspora
Spirituality and health for women of color
The Black Woman That Media Built: Content Creation, Interpretation, and the Making of the Black Female Self
The value of promoting womanist and mujerista leaders.
Who's Schooling Who? Black Women and the Bringing of the Everyday into Academe, or Why We Started "The Womanist"
The womanish roots of womanism: a culturally-derived and African-centered ideal (concept)
Theorizing African Feminism(s): the 'Colonial' Question
WHAT'S IN A NAME? Womanism, Black Feminism, and Beyond
Womanism, creativity, and resistance: Making a way out of "no way"
Womanist preservation: An analysis of Black women’s spiritual coping
Womanists and (Unfinished) Constructions of Salvation