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The Emperor Has No Clothes - Teaching about Race and Racism to People Who Don't Want to Know (Hardcover, New)
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The Emperor Has No Clothes - Teaching about Race and Racism to People Who Don't Want to Know (Hardcover, New)
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A volume in Educational Leadership for Social Justice Series Editor
Jeffrey S. Brooks, University of Missouri-Columbia, Denise E.
Armstrong, Brock University; Ira Bogotch, Florida Atlantic
University; Sandra Harris, Lamar University; Whitney H. Sherman,
Virginia Commonwealth University; George Theoharis, Syracuse
University The Emperor Has No Clothes: Teaching About Race and
Racism to People Who Don't Want to Know offers theoretical
grounding and practical approaches for leaders and teachers
interested in effectively addressing racism and other oppressive
constructs. The book draws both on the author's extensive
experience teaching about race and racism in classroom and
community settings and from the theory and practice of a wide range
of educators, activists, and researchers committed to social
justice. The first chapter looks at the toxic consequences of our
western cultural insistence on profit, binary thinking, and
individualism to establish the theoretical framework for teaching
about race and racism. Chapter two investigates privileged
resistance, offering a psycho/social history of denial,
particularly as a product of racist culture. Chapter three reviews
the research on the construction and reconstruction of dominant
culture both historically and now in order to establish sound
strategic approaches that educators, teachers, facilitators, and
activists can take as we work together to move from a culture of
profit and fear to one of shared hope and love. Chapter four lays
out the stages of a process that supports teaching about racist,
white supremacy culture, explaining how students can be taken
through an iterative process of relationshipbuilding, analysis,
planning, action, and reflection. The final chapter borrows from
the brilliant, brave, and incisive writer Dorothy Allison to
discuss the things the author knows for sure about how to teach
people to see that which we have been conditioned to fear knowing.
The chapter concludes with how to encourage and support collective
and collaborative action as a critical goal of the process.
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