Publication | Closed Access
Mobilizing betrayal: Black feminist pedagogy and Black women graduate student educators
15
Citations
20
References
2020
Year
Critical Race TheoryEducationBlack Feminist PedagogyFeminist InquiryBlack ExperienceSocial SciencesBlack Feminist ThoughtFeminist ResearchGender StudiesAfrican American StudiesBlack WomenBlack Feminist StudiesWomen StudiesBlack Feminist TheoryFeminist ScholarshipIntersectionalityBlack PowerBlack RadicalismEducational LaborFeminist TheoryHigher EducationFeminist MethodologiesAnti-racismBlack Feminist EthicsBlack ProtestBlack Women’s StudiesBlack FeminismStudent EducatorsSocial Justice
Abstract This article addresses Black women graduate students' educational labor in higher education teacher training programs. We ground this reflective account of our respective teaching praxis in the educational betrayal we endured as younger students, connecting it to our engagement of Black feminist pedagogy. We illustrate how this praxis empowered us as undergraduate educators to implement pedagogies of equity and justice. Employing a structured vignette analysis framework, we draw on a Black feminist paradigm and Black feminist autoethnography to examine field notes of our teaching praxis. These two field notes, one from Francena and one from ArCasia, demonstrate challenges that emerged in our instruction of mostly white undergraduates. Despite the precarious nature of our political and professional positions, we discuss why working toward an anti‐oppression praxis remains our ultimate pedagogical aim.
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