{"corpus_id":53117220,"paper_sha":"7cde2d1024267321dd7cffcb11278d780c2e268b","doi":"10.1111/j.1527-2001.1998.tb01370.x","arxiv_id":null,"pmid":null,"pmcid":null,"mag_id":2033781421,"dblp_id":null,"acl_id":null,"title":"It's All In the Family: Intersections of Gender, Race, and Nation","year":1998,"publication_date":"1998-08-01","venue":"Hypatia","journal":{"name":"Hypatia","pages":"62 - 82","volume":"13"},"journal_issn":null,"journal_title":null,"publication_types":[],"pubmed_pub_types":null,"s2_fields_of_study":["Sociology"],"reference_count":46,"citation_count":1284,"influential_citation_count":72,"is_open_access":false,"arxiv_categories":null,"arxiv_license":null,"arxiv_journal_ref":null,"mesh_headings":null,"chemicals":null,"comments_corrections":null,"source_flags":1,"s2_open_access_pdf_url":null,"s2_open_access_landing_url":null,"s2_open_access_license":null,"s2_open_access_status":null,"pmc_open_access_pdf_url":null,"pmc_open_access_landing_url":null,"pmc_open_access_license":null,"pmc_open_access_status":null,"unpaywall_open_access_pdf_url":null,"unpaywall_open_access_landing_url":null,"unpaywall_open_access_license":null,"unpaywall_open_access_status":null,"abstract":"Intersectionality has attracted substantial scholarly attention in the 1990s. Rather than examining gender, race, class, and nation as distinctive social hierarchies, intersectionality examines how they mutually construct one another. I explore how the traditional family ideal functions as a privileged exemplar of intersectionality in the United States. Each of its six dimensions demonstrates specific connections between family as a gendered system of social organization, racial ideas and practices, and constructions of U.S. national identity.","claims":[{"public_id":"cl_5368fadbbc820d35c34b753541f0c732","status":"active","text":"Intersectionality examines how gender, race, class, and nation mutually construct one another rather than treating them as distinctive social hierarchies.","confidence":0.93,"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/claims/cl_5368fadbbc820d35c34b753541f0c732"},{"public_id":"cl_cdfbb600ade728328d11d3c1a37dd469","status":"active","text":"Its six dimensions demonstrate specific connections between family as a gendered system of social organization, racial ideas and practices, and constructions of U.S. national identity.","confidence":0.91,"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/claims/cl_cdfbb600ade728328d11d3c1a37dd469"},{"public_id":"cl_e69df1389646b0f59eed367731a05390","status":"active","text":"The traditional family ideal functions as a privileged exemplar of intersectionality in the United States.","confidence":0.95,"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/claims/cl_e69df1389646b0f59eed367731a05390"}],"concepts":[{"public_id":"co_00eec475616cdda035cbe26c3f921129","status":"active","name":"traditional family ideal","description":"An idealized model of the family treated as normative in U.S. social discourse.","types":["social ideal"],"aliases":["family ideal"],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_00eec475616cdda035cbe26c3f921129"},{"public_id":"co_11a1d55973d2d9f2b968972502a73d11","status":"active","name":"United States","description":"The national context in which the family ideal is analyzed.","types":["country"],"aliases":["U.S."],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_11a1d55973d2d9f2b968972502a73d11"},{"public_id":"co_135d108331ce8140a5c436f012aaaab3","status":"active","name":"U.S. national identity","description":"Constructions of belonging and identity associated with the United States as a nation.","types":["identity"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_135d108331ce8140a5c436f012aaaab3"},{"public_id":"co_14ab729d2f927ab507f873fa01894b93","status":"active","name":"nation","description":"A collective political and cultural identity tied to the state and national belonging.","types":["social category"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_14ab729d2f927ab507f873fa01894b93"},{"public_id":"co_30f7aefc3f8133b9ca890f6609deeb21","status":"active","name":"intersectionality","description":"An analytical approach that studies how social categories such as gender, race, class, and nation shape one another.","types":["framework"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_30f7aefc3f8133b9ca890f6609deeb21"},{"public_id":"co_41901b26949aa3d5c703b7d4bff546f8","status":"active","name":"gendered system of social organization","description":"A social organization in which roles, relations, and institutions are structured by gender.","types":["social system"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_41901b26949aa3d5c703b7d4bff546f8"},{"public_id":"co_46b64aa6ab324585a0aa630324a983b3","status":"active","name":"class","description":"A social category and hierarchy based on socioeconomic position.","types":["social category"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_46b64aa6ab324585a0aa630324a983b3"},{"public_id":"co_778d998bc636a51b5bc3395c8d37ebf0","status":"active","name":"race","description":"A social category and hierarchy used to classify people through racialized meanings and practices.","types":["social category"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_778d998bc636a51b5bc3395c8d37ebf0"},{"public_id":"co_8f5334cf6d6da2a304d044f3b9a17e93","status":"active","name":"racial ideas and practices","description":"Beliefs and actions that produce, sustain, or express racial meanings.","types":["social practice"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_8f5334cf6d6da2a304d044f3b9a17e93"},{"public_id":"co_c90be91adadf8e21225b77fc74014c0d","status":"active","name":"six dimensions","description":"The six analytic dimensions used to examine the family ideal in relation to gender, race, and nation.","types":["analytic structure"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_c90be91adadf8e21225b77fc74014c0d"},{"public_id":"co_cac067bd26536354d038dd68480d39aa","status":"active","name":"gender","description":"A social category and hierarchy concerned with roles and relations associated with masculinity and femininity.","types":["social category"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_cac067bd26536354d038dd68480d39aa"}],"external_ids":{"DOI":"10.1111/j.1527-2001.1998.tb01370.x","ArXiv":null,"PubMed":null,"PubMedCentral":null,"MAG":2033781421,"DBLP":null,"ACL":null},"open_access":{"is_open_access":false,"pdf_url":null,"landing_url":"https://sah.borca.ai/papers/53117220","source":null,"pdf_url_source":null,"license":null,"reason":"pdf_url_not_indexed"},"reference_availability":{"status":"available","references_indexed":true,"full_text_available":false,"full_text_source":null,"count_basis":"semantic_scholar_metadata","extraction_status":"not_applicable","reason":null},"source":{"provider":"episteme2","base_corpus":"semantic_scholar_dump","freshness_mode":"unknown","basis":["semantic_scholar_metadata","postgres_metadata"],"limits":["paper metadata is based on indexed upstream scholarly datasets","claims and concepts are available only for extracted papers","absence of claims or concepts means no extracted graph data is available in this response"],"status":"available","degraded":false,"degraded_reasons":[],"diagnostics":{"status":"available","degraded":false,"degraded_reasons":[],"metadata_status":"available","graph_status":"available","abstract_status":"available"},"source_flags":1},"paper_id":630499,"paper_uid":"11dfeecc-1d1e-4be5-8ed3-b47245a640e0","canonical_identity":{"paper_id":630499,"paper_uid":"11dfeecc-1d1e-4be5-8ed3-b47245a640e0","identity_status":"available","lookup_basis":"semantic_scholar_external_id","compatibility_path":"corpus_id"},"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/papers/53117220"}