Bailey attended
Spelman College for her undergraduate degree. She received her doctoral degree from
Emory University in the department of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. After working at
Northeastern University as an assistant professor in the Department of Cultures, Societies, and Global Studies and the program in Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, she joined the Department of Communication Studies at Northwestern.[4]
She works with the
Octavia E. Butler Legacy Network,[5] "an organization that supports and promotes the writer's legacy,"[6] and is the co-founder of Quirky Black Girls, a collective for black women who do not fit cultural stereotypes.[7][8] She also worked on the project #tooFEW. The hashtag "FEW" stands for "Feminists Engage Wikipedia".[9] The objective of this project was to have feminists engage Wikipedia pages, both adding and editing information regarding individuals, events and things regarding feminism (with a particular focus on Black feminism).[9] She received backlash and derogatory comments for taking part in this initiative.[10]
Misogynoir
Bailey originally coined the term misogynoir in 2008, but first used the term in a 2010 essay entitled "They aren't talking about me...".[11] It is a portmanteau of the word misogyny and noir, the French word for 'black'.[1][6] Bailey coined the term to describe a unique type of discrimination experienced by black women, specifically the "anti-Black racist misogyny that black women experience, particularly in US
visual and
digital culture."[12] Since her initial creation of the term, she has elaborated further on the subject in a number of works, and the term has also been adopted by other scholars in fields such as
gynecology,[13] rhetoric and communications,[14] and law.[15]
In a 2014 blog post she wrote:
I was looking for precise language to describe why
Renisha McBride would be shot in the face, or why The Onion would think it's okay to talk about
Quvenzhané the way they did, or the hypervisibilty of Black women on reality TV, the arrest of Shanesha Taylor, the incarceration of
CeCe,
Laverne and
Lupita being left off the TIME list, the continued legal actions against
Marissa Alexander, the twitter dragging of black women with hateful hashtags and supposedly funny Instagram images as well as how Black women are talked about in music.[16]
Publications
Misogynoir Transformed: Black Women's Digital Resistance. New York University Press. 2021.
ISBN978-1-4798-6510-9.
^Marez, Curtis (2019). University Babylon: Film and Race Politics on Campus. Oakland: University of California Press. Note 37, p. 214.
ISBN978-0-520-30457-4.