ABSTRACT

Sister–girl talk is a novel and delicate approach to group interviewing Black women. Being grounded in Black-feminist ways of knowing, sister–girl talk assists in understanding how Black women navigate and negotiate space into place, particularly when communicating about parts of themselves that have been identified by society, such as health languaging and health practices. This chapter demonstrates practice transitioning into praxis. Used as a method for critically collecting qualitative data, sister–girl talk becomes a praxis for facilitating, codifying, and highlighting the lived experience of Black women.