
Storytelling and Improvisation as Anti-Racist Pedagogies
Description
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Using the frameworks of storytelling and story analysis, this book uses narrative to invite the reader into ongoing work to design and make sense of teaching and learning about whiteness that would meaningfully account for a grapple with white supremacy. Chapter 1 offers the conceptual framework rooted in theories and practices of improvisation that allow for new ways to think about engaging whiteness in anti-racist pedagogies, which the authors name transformative critical whiteness pedagogies. Chapters 2-4 tell and analyze the stories that emerged out of this work to design and facilitate transformative critical whiteness pedagogies with white elementary students, white college students, and then black elementary students in the US. Chapters 5 and 6 discuss the challenges of developing and implementing transformative critical whiteness pedagogies in K-12 contexts. The final chapters offer a discussion of the improvisational ethos, as well as an overview of the authors' ongoing work to engage people, especially white people, in getting smarter about whiteness.
Using simple, straightforward language to address complex ideas about anti-racist pedagogies, this volume will be important reading for pre-service teachers and teacher educators in Critical Whiteness Studies, Critical Multicultural Education, Social Foundations of Education, Elementary Education, and Race and Culture Studies.
Reviews / Votes
"This work is especially timely and important as reactionaries frame their defence of white supremacy as defending children from indoctrination. With states banning CRT and discussions of race and racism, examples of complex work on whiteness from elementary schools is refreshing and inspiring as we imagine resistances to oppressive conservative forces that are actively white-washing history and negating the lived experiences of millions of peoples of color." - Zachary A. Casey, Associate Professor and Chair of Educational Studies at Rhodes College, USA."The authors' use of five distinct facets of improvisation ... and how these traits counter whiteness and its reliance of repression, conditional love, control and being controlled are provocative and compelling. ... Having the ability to discuss such a complex topic, to reference sophisticated theories, and to be frank-all in simple, straightforward language-are rare in the field, and much-needed." - Sophia Sarigianides, Professor of English Education at Westfield State University.
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Persons
Erin T. Miller is Associate Professor in the Reading and Elementary Education Department in the Cato College of Education, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA.
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