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Developing a critical consciousness: positionality, pedagogy, and problems
41
Citations
16
References
2009
Year
Curriculum InquiryCritical Race TheoryEducationRacial StudyClass StudiesSocial SciencesOwn Critical ConsciousnessRaceContemporary RacismWhite SupremacyPraxisPhilosophy Of MindAfrican American StudiesCivil RightsPhilosophy Of EducationEthnic StudiesCritical EducationBlack Feminist TheoryPedagogyRacialization StudiesIntersectionalityCritical ConsciousnessCritical TheoryCritical PedagogyAnti-racismBlack ProtestHumanitiesBlack PoliticsCritical Whiteness StudiesAnti-essentialismCritical Black StudiesRace RelationCritical ThinkingSocial Justice
Abstract This article relies on Critical Race Theory (CRT) to examine the development of a critical consciousness necessary to understand the contradictions between the post‐civil rights notion of abstract equality and the reality of structurally entrenched inequality. The authors' ground their analysis in narratives on the development of their own critical consciousness and how it informs their pedagogy around teaching about the American Civil Rights Movement (CRM). The relationship between their own positionality and the pedagogical tools relevant in accessing their own critical consciousness serves as exemplar for understanding the impact of CRT on a critical education. Keywords: critical race theorycritical race pedagogycritical consciousnessCivil Rights Movementabstract equalitycolor‐blindnessmaster narrativecounter narrative Notes 1. Natrona County is in the center of the state; Casper is the major city. It is the childhood home of Dick and Lynn Cheney. 2. For a more expansive description of this framework, please contact the authors.
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