Medical Trauma and the Black Female Body: Enacting Clinical Justice for African American Female Victims of Sexual Assault.

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Abstract/Contents

Abstract
This essay won or received an honorable mention for The Boothe Prize for excellence in first-year writing. The Boothe Prize recognizes and rewards outstanding expository and argumentative writing by undergraduate students in the first-year Writing and Rhetoric classes, Integrated Learning Environments, and Thinking Matters programs. In each award-winning essay, student writers demonstrate clarity of argument, excellent integration of research-based evidence, and compelling prose style. In this essay, Esther Omole explores the history of African American victims of sexual assault and the care they receive in medical facilities.

Description

Type of resource text
Date created June 2019

Creators/Contributors

Author Omole, Esther
Advisor Pittock, Sarah Peterson

Subjects

Subject Program in Writing and Rhetoric
Subject sexual assault
Subject African American
Subject medicine
Genre Student project report

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Use and reproduction
User agrees that, where applicable, content will not be used to identify or to otherwise infringe the privacy or confidentiality rights of individuals. Content distributed via the Stanford Digital Repository may be subject to additional license and use restrictions applied by the depositor.

Preferred citation

Preferred Citation
Omole, Esther and Pittock, Sarah Peterson. (2019). Medical Trauma and the Black Female Body: Enacting Clinical Justice for African American Female Victims of Sexual Assault. Stanford Digital Repository. Available at: https://purl.stanford.edu/sz273tt1006

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Boothe Prize Winners, Stanford University

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