Dismantling Constructs of Whiteness in Higher Education
portes grátis
Dismantling Constructs of Whiteness in Higher Education
Narratives of Resistance from the Academy
Montanez, Margie; Neely, Teresa Y.
Taylor & Francis Ltd
09/2022
296
Dura
Inglês
9780367465551
15 a 20 dias
762
Descrição não disponível.
Introduction: unmasking the personal, professional, and intersectional interstices of whiteness in higher education
Margie Montanez and Teresa Y. Neely
Part I: Foregrounding whiteness as a social structure in higher education
Chapter 1: Justice in action in the ivory towers: decolonial and anti-racist work inside/outside the master's house
Eric Castillo
Chapter 2: sketching otherwise im/possibilities: meditations against and beyond the state
nicholae cline and Jorge R. Lopez-McKnight
Chapter 3: Vital elements in the deconstruction of whiteness and eurocentrism in higher education work settings
J. E. Jamal Martin
Chapter 4: Pervasive whiteness vs. black women in academia
Sheryl Felecia Means
Chapter 5: Microaffections and microaffirmations: refusing to reproduce whiteness via microaffirmative actions
Isabel Espinal
Part II: The case of academic libraries
Chapter 6: Why are you Brown? Racial microaggressions in Canadian academic libraries
Dee Winn
Chapter 7: I don't know if I'm surviving, but I'm still here: Reflections on 20-plus years in academic librarianship
Nikhat J. Ghouse
Chapter 8: Same scat, different century: An [unremarkable] history of inaction in US libraries and archives
Deborah R. Hollis
Part III: Erasures, absences, silences, and violence in higher education
Chapter 9: Threefer: Poetic reflections on resistance to misogynoir
Belinda Deneen Wallace
Chapter 10: Is the door half-opened or half-closed? Advancing a career after Black Culture Center work
Brandi Wells-Stone
Chapter 11: African American male faculty: A study of their experiences related to intercultural competence at predominantly white institutions
Hervey A. Taylor III
Chapter 12: The life of a Black college athlete
Keon R. Williams
Chapter 13: They took my hair-racial battle fatigue in academe: Accounts from the plantation
Evangela Q. Oates
Chapter 14: Scholar while Black: Theorizing race-gender micro/macroaggressions as covert racist actions for maintaining white domination in academia in a "Post-Racial" Society
Michael Muhammad and Nancy Lopez
Part IV: Identity Politics
Chapter 15: Exterior college campus
Derrick Jefferson
Chapter 16: Decolonizing our hearts and our minds
Nicole A. Cooke
Chapter 17: Merit, gate keeping, and the myth of meritocracy
Stephanie Akau
Chapter 18: Home is where you are: An open letter to my academic Auntie
TeyAnjulee Leon
Chapter 19: Road trip: Heavy luggage and the doctoral HBCU experience
LaKeshia Darden
Margie Montanez and Teresa Y. Neely
Part I: Foregrounding whiteness as a social structure in higher education
Chapter 1: Justice in action in the ivory towers: decolonial and anti-racist work inside/outside the master's house
Eric Castillo
Chapter 2: sketching otherwise im/possibilities: meditations against and beyond the state
nicholae cline and Jorge R. Lopez-McKnight
Chapter 3: Vital elements in the deconstruction of whiteness and eurocentrism in higher education work settings
J. E. Jamal Martin
Chapter 4: Pervasive whiteness vs. black women in academia
Sheryl Felecia Means
Chapter 5: Microaffections and microaffirmations: refusing to reproduce whiteness via microaffirmative actions
Isabel Espinal
Part II: The case of academic libraries
Chapter 6: Why are you Brown? Racial microaggressions in Canadian academic libraries
Dee Winn
Chapter 7: I don't know if I'm surviving, but I'm still here: Reflections on 20-plus years in academic librarianship
Nikhat J. Ghouse
Chapter 8: Same scat, different century: An [unremarkable] history of inaction in US libraries and archives
Deborah R. Hollis
Part III: Erasures, absences, silences, and violence in higher education
Chapter 9: Threefer: Poetic reflections on resistance to misogynoir
Belinda Deneen Wallace
Chapter 10: Is the door half-opened or half-closed? Advancing a career after Black Culture Center work
Brandi Wells-Stone
Chapter 11: African American male faculty: A study of their experiences related to intercultural competence at predominantly white institutions
Hervey A. Taylor III
Chapter 12: The life of a Black college athlete
Keon R. Williams
Chapter 13: They took my hair-racial battle fatigue in academe: Accounts from the plantation
Evangela Q. Oates
Chapter 14: Scholar while Black: Theorizing race-gender micro/macroaggressions as covert racist actions for maintaining white domination in academia in a "Post-Racial" Society
Michael Muhammad and Nancy Lopez
Part IV: Identity Politics
Chapter 15: Exterior college campus
Derrick Jefferson
Chapter 16: Decolonizing our hearts and our minds
Nicole A. Cooke
Chapter 17: Merit, gate keeping, and the myth of meritocracy
Stephanie Akau
Chapter 18: Home is where you are: An open letter to my academic Auntie
TeyAnjulee Leon
Chapter 19: Road trip: Heavy luggage and the doctoral HBCU experience
LaKeshia Darden
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Whiteness;White supremacy;White privilege;Critical Race Theory;CRT;Race;Structural racism;Violence on campus;Imposter syndrome;Decolonization;Counternarratives;People of Color;Academics of Color;Racial Battle Fatigue;RBF;Black Feminist Theory;BFT;Academic libraries;Library and Information Sciences;LIS;Identity politics;Sense of belonging;Ivory tower;John Henryism;Young Men;American Library Association;Jesmyn Ward;HBCU Experience;NFL Scout;HBCU;White Spaces;North Carolina Central University;Concerted Effort;DEI;Racial Microaggressions;Li Profession;Canadian Academic Librarians;Student Affairs;Minoritized Populations;BCC;Li Field;Li Degree;Human Suffering;Deep Whiteness;Skilled Reference Interview;Institutional Review Board;IRB
Introduction: unmasking the personal, professional, and intersectional interstices of whiteness in higher education
Margie Montanez and Teresa Y. Neely
Part I: Foregrounding whiteness as a social structure in higher education
Chapter 1: Justice in action in the ivory towers: decolonial and anti-racist work inside/outside the master's house
Eric Castillo
Chapter 2: sketching otherwise im/possibilities: meditations against and beyond the state
nicholae cline and Jorge R. Lopez-McKnight
Chapter 3: Vital elements in the deconstruction of whiteness and eurocentrism in higher education work settings
J. E. Jamal Martin
Chapter 4: Pervasive whiteness vs. black women in academia
Sheryl Felecia Means
Chapter 5: Microaffections and microaffirmations: refusing to reproduce whiteness via microaffirmative actions
Isabel Espinal
Part II: The case of academic libraries
Chapter 6: Why are you Brown? Racial microaggressions in Canadian academic libraries
Dee Winn
Chapter 7: I don't know if I'm surviving, but I'm still here: Reflections on 20-plus years in academic librarianship
Nikhat J. Ghouse
Chapter 8: Same scat, different century: An [unremarkable] history of inaction in US libraries and archives
Deborah R. Hollis
Part III: Erasures, absences, silences, and violence in higher education
Chapter 9: Threefer: Poetic reflections on resistance to misogynoir
Belinda Deneen Wallace
Chapter 10: Is the door half-opened or half-closed? Advancing a career after Black Culture Center work
Brandi Wells-Stone
Chapter 11: African American male faculty: A study of their experiences related to intercultural competence at predominantly white institutions
Hervey A. Taylor III
Chapter 12: The life of a Black college athlete
Keon R. Williams
Chapter 13: They took my hair-racial battle fatigue in academe: Accounts from the plantation
Evangela Q. Oates
Chapter 14: Scholar while Black: Theorizing race-gender micro/macroaggressions as covert racist actions for maintaining white domination in academia in a "Post-Racial" Society
Michael Muhammad and Nancy Lopez
Part IV: Identity Politics
Chapter 15: Exterior college campus
Derrick Jefferson
Chapter 16: Decolonizing our hearts and our minds
Nicole A. Cooke
Chapter 17: Merit, gate keeping, and the myth of meritocracy
Stephanie Akau
Chapter 18: Home is where you are: An open letter to my academic Auntie
TeyAnjulee Leon
Chapter 19: Road trip: Heavy luggage and the doctoral HBCU experience
LaKeshia Darden
Margie Montanez and Teresa Y. Neely
Part I: Foregrounding whiteness as a social structure in higher education
Chapter 1: Justice in action in the ivory towers: decolonial and anti-racist work inside/outside the master's house
Eric Castillo
Chapter 2: sketching otherwise im/possibilities: meditations against and beyond the state
nicholae cline and Jorge R. Lopez-McKnight
Chapter 3: Vital elements in the deconstruction of whiteness and eurocentrism in higher education work settings
J. E. Jamal Martin
Chapter 4: Pervasive whiteness vs. black women in academia
Sheryl Felecia Means
Chapter 5: Microaffections and microaffirmations: refusing to reproduce whiteness via microaffirmative actions
Isabel Espinal
Part II: The case of academic libraries
Chapter 6: Why are you Brown? Racial microaggressions in Canadian academic libraries
Dee Winn
Chapter 7: I don't know if I'm surviving, but I'm still here: Reflections on 20-plus years in academic librarianship
Nikhat J. Ghouse
Chapter 8: Same scat, different century: An [unremarkable] history of inaction in US libraries and archives
Deborah R. Hollis
Part III: Erasures, absences, silences, and violence in higher education
Chapter 9: Threefer: Poetic reflections on resistance to misogynoir
Belinda Deneen Wallace
Chapter 10: Is the door half-opened or half-closed? Advancing a career after Black Culture Center work
Brandi Wells-Stone
Chapter 11: African American male faculty: A study of their experiences related to intercultural competence at predominantly white institutions
Hervey A. Taylor III
Chapter 12: The life of a Black college athlete
Keon R. Williams
Chapter 13: They took my hair-racial battle fatigue in academe: Accounts from the plantation
Evangela Q. Oates
Chapter 14: Scholar while Black: Theorizing race-gender micro/macroaggressions as covert racist actions for maintaining white domination in academia in a "Post-Racial" Society
Michael Muhammad and Nancy Lopez
Part IV: Identity Politics
Chapter 15: Exterior college campus
Derrick Jefferson
Chapter 16: Decolonizing our hearts and our minds
Nicole A. Cooke
Chapter 17: Merit, gate keeping, and the myth of meritocracy
Stephanie Akau
Chapter 18: Home is where you are: An open letter to my academic Auntie
TeyAnjulee Leon
Chapter 19: Road trip: Heavy luggage and the doctoral HBCU experience
LaKeshia Darden
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Whiteness;White supremacy;White privilege;Critical Race Theory;CRT;Race;Structural racism;Violence on campus;Imposter syndrome;Decolonization;Counternarratives;People of Color;Academics of Color;Racial Battle Fatigue;RBF;Black Feminist Theory;BFT;Academic libraries;Library and Information Sciences;LIS;Identity politics;Sense of belonging;Ivory tower;John Henryism;Young Men;American Library Association;Jesmyn Ward;HBCU Experience;NFL Scout;HBCU;White Spaces;North Carolina Central University;Concerted Effort;DEI;Racial Microaggressions;Li Profession;Canadian Academic Librarians;Student Affairs;Minoritized Populations;BCC;Li Field;Li Degree;Human Suffering;Deep Whiteness;Skilled Reference Interview;Institutional Review Board;IRB