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Challenging Antisemitism: Lessons from Literacy Classrooms provides
theoretical framing and historical context for understanding
contemporary antisemitism and offers teachers curricular ideas and
practical strategies to address antisemitism and amplify Jewish
voices in secondary and post-secondary literacy classrooms.
In Antisemitism and the White Supremacist Imaginary: Conflations
and Contradictions in Composition and Rhetoric, Mara Lee Grayson
calls attention to the complicity of academic institutions and the
discipline(s) of rhetoric, composition, and writing studies in the
simultaneous perpetuation and denial of anti-Jewish racism. Despite
the persistence of antisemitism and Christian hegemony in the
United States and its academic institutions, and despite a growing
body of antiracist and anti-oppressive scholarship, antisemitism
remains largely unaddressed in disciplinary scholarship, curricula,
and pedagogy. This book seeks to (begin to) fill that gap by
exploring how the rhetoric through which Jewish identity is
conceptualized and weaponized by the white supremacist imaginary
essentializes Jewish identities and obscures the racist aims and
character of antisemitism. Through rhetorical analysis, historical
context, and personal narrative, and drawing upon original
phenomenological research, Grayson highlights how deeply embedded
antisemitic ideologies impact the lived experiences of Jewish
teachers, students, and scholars, and perpetuate white supremacy.
This book addresses concerns both experiential and rhetorical,
illuminates the rhetorical, historical, political, and racial
dynamics of antisemitism, and exposes the limitations of existing
discourses of whiteness and (anti)racism. This book gestures toward
a future in which, through a more nuanced and productive discourse,
we can better support Jewish educators and students and engage
Jewish members of the discipline as better accomplices in
antiracism. "I take this book personally. Grayson's theoretical
framework, historical overview, personal anecdotes, and
phenomenological research locate antisemitism nestled in the heart
of the white supremacist imaginary. I felt such sadness, anger, and
pain reading this book-recognizing myself as a Jew in its stark
reflection-and yet her words also charge me, explicitly in my
Jewishness, with the urgent need to join others in imagining a more
just world through cooperative action and frank dialogue. It's a
powerful and vibrant contribution to our field." -Eli Goldblatt,
Co-Author, with David Jolliffe, of Literacy as Conversation:
Learning Networks in Urban and Rural Communities
In Antisemitism and the White Supremacist Imaginary: Conflations
and Contradictions in Composition and Rhetoric, Mara Lee Grayson
calls attention to the complicity of academic institutions and the
discipline(s) of rhetoric, composition, and writing studies in the
simultaneous perpetuation and denial of anti-Jewish racism. Despite
the persistence of antisemitism and Christian hegemony in the
United States and its academic institutions, and despite a growing
body of antiracist and anti-oppressive scholarship, antisemitism
remains largely unaddressed in disciplinary scholarship, curricula,
and pedagogy. This book seeks to (begin to) fill that gap by
exploring how the rhetoric through which Jewish identity is
conceptualized and weaponized by the white supremacist imaginary
essentializes Jewish identities and obscures the racist aims and
character of antisemitism. Through rhetorical analysis, historical
context, and personal narrative, and drawing upon original
phenomenological research, Grayson highlights how deeply embedded
antisemitic ideologies impact the lived experiences of Jewish
teachers, students, and scholars, and perpetuate white supremacy.
This book addresses concerns both experiential and rhetorical,
illuminates the rhetorical, historical, political, and racial
dynamics of antisemitism, and exposes the limitations of existing
discourses of whiteness and (anti)racism. This book gestures toward
a future in which, through a more nuanced and productive discourse,
we can better support Jewish educators and students and engage
Jewish members of the discipline as better accomplices in
antiracism. "I take this book personally. Grayson's theoretical
framework, historical overview, personal anecdotes, and
phenomenological research locate antisemitism nestled in the heart
of the white supremacist imaginary. I felt such sadness, anger, and
pain reading this book-recognizing myself as a Jew in its stark
reflection-and yet her words also charge me, explicitly in my
Jewishness, with the urgent need to join others in imagining a more
just world through cooperative action and frank dialogue. It's a
powerful and vibrant contribution to our field." -Eli Goldblatt,
Co-Author, with David Jolliffe, of Literacy as Conversation:
Learning Networks in Urban and Rural Communities
Racial literacy, a collection of discursive and decoding skills
that allow individuals to interrogate race and racism as well as
representation and personal identity, is vital in a contemporary
society that professes meritocracy and post-racialism yet where
racism and racialism continue to give rise to fear, violence, and
inequity. Because racial literacy requires individuals to develop a
cache of discursive tools with which to critically read and respond
to particular situations and broader societal practices as well as
to investigate the rhetorical practices and power of racial
ideology, there is no venue better fitted to the development of
racial literacy than the college composition classroom. From the
planning stages through the end of the semester, this book provides
practical strategies for designing and implementing racial literacy
curricula in the composition classroom and across the curriculum.
Drawing upon an award-winning three-year ethnographic teacher
research project, the author offers curricular suggestions and
teacher resources instructors can use to increase student
engagement, improve student writing, and help students harness the
tools of racial literacy, including awareness of structural
inequity and discursive modes with which to respond to social
injustice.
To generate opportunities for transformative learning, educators
must create learning environments that help students feel safe and
encourage them to grapple with potentially difficult material. The
trigger warning, a brief statement information students of
potential distressing or re-traumatizing content, has been offered
as a way to do just that, but this practice is neither as effective
nor as equitable as it may seem. Intentionally or indirectly, the
trigger warning limits the extent to which students are encouraged
to engage in transformative critical conversations and reinforces
the culture of silence that prevails in many educational spaces.
Emerging as a response to trauma amid an educational environment
that professes student-responsiveness and celebrates diversity yet
perpetuates the marginalization of many of the bodies in the
classroom, the trigger warning is not the problem - but it is not
the solution either. What does this mean for the faculty members
teaching this new generation of college students? And the teachers
who find this generation's younger siblings in their high school
classrooms? Drawing upon original research, Mara Lee Grayson tracks
the rise of the trigger warning within historical and contemporary
educational contexts; explores its potentialities, limitations, and
abuses as praxis; and offers curricular suggestions for high school
and college instructors seeking to implement equitable, antiracist
pedagogies that simultaneously encourage students' well-being,
provoke intellectual and emotional growth, and challenge the
cultures of silence that maintain inequity on school campuses.
Challenging Antisemitism: Lessons from Literacy Classrooms provides
theoretical framing and historical context for understanding
contemporary antisemitism and offers teachers curricular ideas and
practical strategies to address antisemitism and amplify Jewish
voices in secondary and post-secondary literacy classrooms.
To generate opportunities for transformative learning, educators
must create learning environments that help students feel safe and
encourage them to grapple with potentially difficult material. The
trigger warning, a brief statement information students of
potential distressing or re-traumatizing content, has been offered
as a way to do just that, but this practice is neither as effective
nor as equitable as it may seem. Intentionally or indirectly, the
trigger warning limits the extent to which students are encouraged
to engage in transformative critical conversations and reinforces
the culture of silence that prevails in many educational spaces.
Emerging as a response to trauma amid an educational environment
that professes student-responsiveness and celebrates diversity yet
perpetuates the marginalization of many of the bodies in the
classroom, the trigger warning is not the problem - but it is not
the solution either. What does this mean for the faculty members
teaching this new generation of college students? And the teachers
who find this generation's younger siblings in their high school
classrooms? Drawing upon original research, Mara Lee Grayson tracks
the rise of the trigger warning within historical and contemporary
educational contexts; explores its potentialities, limitations, and
abuses as praxis; and offers curricular suggestions for high school
and college instructors seeking to implement equitable, antiracist
pedagogies that simultaneously encourage students' well-being,
provoke intellectual and emotional growth, and challenge the
cultures of silence that maintain inequity on school campuses.
Racial literacy, a collection of discursive and decoding skills
that allow individuals to interrogate race and racism as well as
representation and personal identity, is vital in a contemporary
society that professes meritocracy and post-racialism yet where
racism and racialism continue to give rise to fear, violence, and
inequity. Because racial literacy requires individuals to develop a
cache of discursive tools with which to critically read and respond
to particular situations and broader societal practices as well as
to investigate the rhetorical practices and power of racial
ideology, there is no venue better fitted to the development of
racial literacy than the college composition classroom. From the
planning stages through the end of the semester, this book provides
practical strategies for designing and implementing racial literacy
curricula in the composition classroom and across the curriculum.
Drawing upon an award-winning three-year ethnographic teacher
research project, the author offers curricular suggestions and
teacher resources instructors can use to increase student
engagement, improve student writing, and help students harness the
tools of racial literacy, including awareness of structural
inequity and discursive modes with which to respond to social
injustice.
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