Skip to content
IJAS Logo
  • Home
  • Submission Guidelines
    • Books For Review
  • Editorial Board
  • Browse All Issue and Articles
    • 2020s
      • Issue 14 2025
      • Issue 13 2024
      • Issue 12 2023
      • Issue 11 2022
      • Issue 10 2020-21
      • Issue 9 2020
    • 2010s
      • Issue 8 2018-19
      • Issue 7 2018
      • Issue 6 2017
      • Issue 5 2016
      • Issue 4 2015
      • Issue 3 2014
      • Issue 2 2010
    • 2000s
      • Issue 1 2009
    • ARCHIVE
      • IJAS ONLINE 2009-
      • IJAS 1992-2004
    • Articles
    • Reviews
    • Interviews
    • Contributors
      • Issue 14 2025
      • Issue 13 2024
      • Issue 12 2023
      • Issue 11 2022
      • Issue 10 2020-21
      • Issue 9 2020
      • Issue 8 2018-19
      • Issue 7 2018
      • Issue 6 2017
      • Issue 5 2016
      • Issue 3 2014
      • Issue 4 2015
      • Issue 3 2014
  • About
  • Login

Posts by Niamh Keating

  • Home
  • Niamh Keating
About Niamh Keating
Niamh Keating completed an MA in Gender and Sexuality in Culture at University College Dublin in 2021. Her essay 'Respectability Politics and the Culture of Dissemblance in Stanley Kramer’s Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner and Jack Hill’s Foxy Brown' won the Irish Association of American Studies Prize for Postgraduate Writing also in 2021.
Respectability Politics and the Culture of Dissemblance in Stanley Kramer’s Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner and Jack Hill’s Foxy Brown
Posted inArticles Issue 12 2023

Respectability Politics and the Culture of Dissemblance in Stanley Kramer’s Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner and Jack Hill’s Foxy Brown

Posted by Niamh Keating
EISSN (2009-2377)
Copyright 2025 — Irish Journal of American Studies. All rights reserved.
Scroll to Top