Melinda Marshall

Ambition in Black + White


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      Melinda Marshall

      Tai Wingfield

      Featuring profiles of Sylvia Ann Hewlett,

      Mellody Hobson, and Charlene Drew Jarvis

      This is a Center for Talent Innovation Publication

      A Vireo Book | Rare Bird Books

      453 South Spring Street, Suite 302

      Los Angeles, CA 90013

      rarebirdbooks.com

      Copyright © 2016 by Center for Talent Innovation

      All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever, including but not limited to print, audio, and electronic. For more information, address:

      A Vireo Book | Rare Bird Books Subsidiary Rights Department,

      453 South Spring Street, Suite 302, Los Angeles, CA 90013.

      Set in Minion

      ePub ISBN: 978-1-942600-93-0

      Publisher’s Cataloging-in-Publication data

      Names: Marshall, Melinda, author | Wingfield, Tai, author.

      Title: Ambition in black and white : the feminist narrative revised / by Melinda Marshall and Tai Wingfield.

      Description: Includes bibliographical references and index. | First Trade Paperback Original Edition. | A Vireo Book. | New York [New York] ; Los Angeles [California] : Rare Bird Books, 2016.

      Identifiers: ISBN 978-1-942600-79-4

      Subjects: LCSH Feminism. | Feminists. | African American feminists. | African Americans—Race identity. | Sex role—United States. | Women’s studies—United States. |Racism—United States. | Identity politics—United States. | African Americans—Economic conditions. | Women—Employment—United States. | BISAC SOCIAL SCIENCE / Feminism & Feminist Theory | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / African American Studies | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Women’s Studies | BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Women in Business.

      Classification: LCC HD6095 .M29 2016 | DDC 331.4/0973—dc23

      To all the women, black and white, who fought fearlessly to ensure we could have a voice.

      Project Team

      Project Lead

      Sylvia Ann Hewlett, Founder and CEO

      Quantitative Research

      Laura Sherbin, CFO and Director of Research

      Pooja Jain-Link, Senior Research Associate

      Charlene Thrope, Research Associate

      Qualitative Research

      Anna Weerasinghe, Fellow

      Production

      Isis Fabian, Research Associate

      Catherine Chapman, Research Associate

      Communications

      Silvia Marte, Communications Associate

      Contents

      Prologue: Different Pasts, Different Starting Gates

       PART ONE: WOMEN AND POWER

      Chapter 1: Power in Black and White

       PART TWO: THE BATTLE BEFORE US

      Chapter 2: Black Women Are Invisible

      Chapter 3: Ambition and Ambivalence

      Chapter 4: Arm All Women to Win Sponsorship

       PART THREE: WHAT SUCCESS LOOKS LIKE

      Chapter 5: Flourishing

      Chapter 6: Excelling

      Chapter 7: Reaching for Meaning and Purpose

      Chapter 8: Empowered, and Empowering Others

      Chapter 9: Earning Well

      Epilogue: Where We Go From Here

       Endnotes

       Methodology

       Acknowledgments

      Index

      Prologue

      Different Pasts, Different Starting Gates

      “We can no longer ignore that voice within women that says: ‘I want something more than my husband and my children and my home.’”1

      These words, written by Betty Friedan in 1963, galvanized the movement that reshaped female aspirations, launched women into the workforce, and changed the course of history.2 The “problem that has no name,” as she described women’s malaise, branded the ensuing movement as feminism.

      Yet from the get-go, Friedan’s vision of feminism was not universal. While white, middle-class women framed access to work outside the home as a form of liberation, black women yearned to be liberated from work—from low-paying jobs with poor working conditions where they had little to no opportunity for advancement. As black feminist author and activist bell hooks challenged, “[Friedan] did not tell readers whether it was more fulfilling to be a maid, a babysitter, a factory worker, a clerk, or a prostitute than to be a leisure-class housewife.”3 For the vast majority of black women in 1963, the work available to them was a source of oppression, not liberation; a necessity, not a luxury; a constraint on their fulfillment, not an avenue toward it.

      This is not to say that black women had no part in the feminist movement of the 1960s. On the contrary, black women were, in fact, on the frontlines of not one, but two fights for equal rights in the mid-twentieth century.