Family Welfare and Pernicious Property: White Womanhood and Catholic Social Thought in the United States
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-2023
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Source Publication
Horizons
Source ISSN
0360-9669
Original Item ID
DOI: 10.1017/hor.2023.7
Abstract
A significant literature presents the Catholic social thought tradition (CST) as a resource for combating racism and white supremacy, and an equally important body of work critiques the documentary tradition for the ways it fails to adequately address these pernicious social sins. This essay will combine elements of both approaches to address a topic relatively modest in scope: showing how attention to the historical and contemporary operation of white womanhood, exposed by sociologist Jessie Daniels in her book Nice White Ladies, informs, critiques, and presents opportunities for Catholic social thought on gender and family, both in the ecclesial documents and in their appropriations by white US Catholic scholars. I will address three themes: images of women; the nexus of families and the welfare state; and whiteness as property.
Recommended Citation
Ward, Kate, "Family Welfare and Pernicious Property: White Womanhood and Catholic Social Thought in the United States" (2023). Theology Faculty Research and Publications. 896.
https://epublications.marquette.edu/theo_fac/896
Comments
Horizons, Vol. 50, No. 1 (June 2023): 190-200. DOI.