![](https://d3ilqtpdwi981i.cloudfront.net/OiZoyh3_ZagJDDzTZLt6f7pgaXY=/425x550/smart/https://bepress-attached-resources.s3.amazonaws.com/uploads/f2/cd/c4/f2cdc45d-4da7-4d16-a851-a719b9628444/thumbnail_1ece690d-454f-41f6-b1ab-c9d4b1742817.jpg)
For single African American custodial fathers, parenting stress is exacerbated by the cultural expectation that Black fathers are "normally" absent and by the clustering of stresses that Black men are more likely to encounter. This sample of African American fathers have used a repertoire of problem-focused and cognitive coping strategies, including some that are frequently considered "culturally specific." Twenty Black single custodial fathers are interviewed and their narratives are analyzed for concepts and thematic categories related to stress and coping. Their narratives indicate that certain strategies are avoided because (a) these strategies are not available to them and (b) they desire to present themselves as independent and competent, thus resisting stereotypes and building a sense of efficacy.
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/roberta_coles/4/
Accepted version. Journal of Family Issues, Vol.30, No. 10 (October 2009): 1311-1338. DOI. © 2009 SAGE Publications. Used with permission.