Intersectionality Theory in Sociocultural Anthropology
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Intersectionality’s Origin Story
3. Traveling Theory
4. Intersectionality’s Travels to Sociocultural Anthropology
4.1. Assembling the Collection
4.2. Travelogue
Authors’ positionality: The origins of intersectionality theory in the lived experiences of Black women prompts consideration of the extent to which sociocultural anthropologists who share this identity or other marginalized positionalities are more likely to adopt intersectionality and use it strongly. Information on authors’ identity (gender, race/ethnicity, age, class status), however, is fragmentary, found in occasional reflexive comments in a publication, on a website, or in a taped presentation.
5. Deradicalization with Travel to Sociocultural Anthropology?
5.1. Say Their Names
5.2. Say the Words
5.3. Address the Issues
6. The Intersectionality Generation: Small but Strong
Strong but Mainly Outside the Mainstream
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
1 | I follow Liboiron’s (2021) use of the word colonialism to refer to both past and present practices of controlling populations and places in the pursuit of power and profit. |
2 | Throughout this article, unless otherwise specified, Black feministsare understood to be American. |
3 | This term comes from Australian aboriginal Indigenous studies scholar Aileen Moreton-Robinson (2015, pp. xv–xvi), who views White Possessive as both power and property. |
4 | It is impossible to be definitive about authors’ ethnicities from the available information. |
5 | My positionality is White, female, binary, older, and physically disabled by long COVID. I am a first-generation college graduate with a doctorate, but my degrees are not from a top-tier institution. I have a tenured faculty position at a predominantly White R1 university. While I am privileged in many ways, I have personally experienced subtle forms of discrimination and have witnessed harsher forms meted out to friends. I became firmly convinced of the importance of intersectionality to sociocultural anthropology in 2022 when I began planning a new undergraduate course called the Anthropology of Human Rights. Intersectionality is the major theoretical thread running through the course, along with decolonization, structural violence, critical race theory, feminist theory, and Indigenous studies. |
6 | |
7 | Throughout this article, generalizations that critique sociocultural anthropology are to be read as qualified in that, in all cases, exceptions exist. |
8 | Creole Black American political scientist and gender studies scholar, Hancock (2016) tracesintersectionality’s origins earlier, citing the speeches and writing of free Black woman activist Maria Stewart of Boston. Stewart’s public activism, which lasted three years in the 1830s, pointed out the invisibility of Black women. |
9 | See, for example, Atrey and Dunne (2021), Hankivsky and Jordan-Zachery (2019), Nadal and Río (2021), Tamale (2020), and Zack (2024). |
10 | Collins may have been referring to sources both in and beyond sociology (p. 72). |
11 | In addition to the list of journals affiliated with the American Anthropological Association, I consulted Wikipedia’s List of Anthropology Journals https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_anthropology_journals and The Open Access Anthropology Journal Ticker https://journals.antropologi.info/list-of-journals/. (accessed on 21 August 2022). I also searched the Internet using the following terms: Asia anthropology journal, Africa anthropology journal, China anthropology journal, Kenya anthropology journal, Mexico anthropology journal, India anthropology journal, and more. |
12 | The limitation of this study to English-language journals invites its replication with publications in other languages. |
13 | Given the small number of publications in most years, it makes sense to consider trends by decade. |
14 | The Association of Black Anthropologists is a section of the American Anthropological Association. |
15 | This list is impressionistic. Journal impact ratings change over the years, and prestige is impossible to quantify. |
16 | Syndemics, a theory proposed by critical medical anthropologist Merrill Singer (2009), combines the words synergy and epidemics to refer to the simultaneous occurrence and adverse interactions of multiple diseases or health conditions within a population with attention to biosocial causes including social inequality. |
17 | This term comes from Ferguson’s (1984) book with the same name. Ferguson revealed how the international development apparatus depoliticizes its goals and practices through a discourse that frames out questions of bureaucratic power and resource allocation. |
18 | |
19 | Christen Smith launched the Cite Black Women initiative in 2017 and has, with colleagues, promoted it through Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook; #CiteBlackWomen. |
20 | Positive changes are occurring in the sociocultural anthropology publishing world at least as seen in more diverse appointments to journal editorships and editorial boards. |
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Miller, B. Intersectionality Theory in Sociocultural Anthropology. Humans 2025, 5, 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5020011
Miller B. Intersectionality Theory in Sociocultural Anthropology. Humans. 2025; 5(2):11. https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5020011
Chicago/Turabian StyleMiller, Barbara. 2025. "Intersectionality Theory in Sociocultural Anthropology" Humans 5, no. 2: 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5020011
APA StyleMiller, B. (2025). Intersectionality Theory in Sociocultural Anthropology. Humans, 5(2), 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/humans5020011