The Province

Facing ‘Angry Black Woman’ stereotype

Williams’s treatment during U.S. Open final and subsequent fallout resonates among frustrated working women

- DEEPTI HAJELA The Associated Press

NEW YORK — When Serena Williams told the umpire at the U.S. Open tennis final that he owed her an apology, that he had stolen something from her, and then she got penalized for her words, Breea Willingham could relate to her frustratio­n and anger.

Willingham isn’t a tennis star, but she is a black woman. She and others like her say Williams’ experience resonates with them because they are often forced to watch their tone and words in the workplace in ways that men and other women are not.

And if they’re not careful, they risk being branded “Angry Black Woman.”

“So much of what she experience­s we experience in the workplace, too,” said Willingham, a professor of criminal justice at the State University of New York at Plattsburg­h. “As black women ... we’re expected to stay in our lane, that lane that has been created for us. Any time we step out of that lane, then we become a problem.”

The stereotype of the “Angry Black Woman” is alive and well, said Felicia Martin, 36, a U.S. federal employee. She recalls once seeing a white female co-worker cursing and throwing things and not facing repercussi­ons, while she’s been told to calm down for expressing her own upset in a normal tone of voice.

“If I’m upset about something, I should get to express that to you,” Martin said.

During the championsh­ip loss to Naomi Osaka, Williams got a warning from the chair umpire for violating a rarely enforced rule against receiving coaching from the sidelines. An indignant Williams emphatical­ly defended herself, denying she had cheated. A short time later, she smashed her racket in frustratio­n and was docked a point. She protested that and demanded an apology from the umpire, who penalized her a game.

Many people, black women among them, echoed Williams’ contention that she was punished while men on the tennis circuit get away with even harsher language.

“A lot of things started going through my head in that particular situation. You know, first and foremost, what was going to be said about her the next day? The typical angry black woman, you know ... when she really was just standing up for herself and she was standing up for women’s rights,” said former tennis champion Zina Garrison, who is black.

Martin pointed to a cartoon by an Australian artist as the clearest example of the stereotype facing black women. Mark Knight of Melbourne’s Herald Sun depicted Williams as an irate, hulking, bigmouthed black woman jumping up and down on a broken racket. The umpire was shown telling a blond, slender woman — meant to be Osaka, who is Japanese and Haitian — “Can you just let her win?”

The cartoonist “completely missed the point of why she was upset,” said Vanessa K. De Luca, former editor-in-chief of Essence magazine, who wrote a column about the U.S. Open furor. “It was about her integrity, and anybody who doesn’t get that is perpetuati­ng the erasure that so many black women feel when they are trying to speak up for themselves. It’s like our opinions don’t matter.”

Some black women say they have to worry perpetuall­y about how they’re coming across to make sure they’re not dismissed as angry or emotional.

Willingham thinks it was also about a career’s worth of frustratio­ns Williams has had to endure, such as when the French Open banned the type of catsuit she wore.

“I felt it for her. I felt she was fed up, she was tired of this,” Willingham said.

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Serena Williams got upset with umpire Brian Earley’s calls during the U.S. Open final, setting off a debate about whether Williams was justified in her actions and whether the umpire was justified in his.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Serena Williams got upset with umpire Brian Earley’s calls during the U.S. Open final, setting off a debate about whether Williams was justified in her actions and whether the umpire was justified in his.

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