Fr. 66.00

Black Feminist Epistemology, Research, and Praxis - Narratives in and Through the Academy

English · Paperback / Softback

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While there has been an increase of Black women faculty in higher education institutions, the academy writ large continues to exploit, discriminate, and uphold institutionalized gendered racism through its policies and practices. Black women have navigated, negotiated, and learned how to thrive from their respective standpoints and epistemologies, traversing the academy in ways that counter typical narratives of success and advancement. This edited volume bridges together foundational and contemporary intergenerational, interdisciplinary voices to elucidate Black feminist epistemologies and praxis. Chapter authors highlight relevant research, methodologies, and theoretical or conceptual frameworks; share experiences as doctoral students, current faculty, and academic administrators; and offer lessons learned and strategies to influence systemic and institutional change for and with Black women.

List of contents

Series Editor's Introduction
Frank A. Bonner II

Foreword: "Speak Your Names"
Venus E. Evans-Winters


  1. Applying Black Feminist Epistemologies, Research, and Praxis: An Introduction

  2. Christa J. Porter, V. Thandi Sulé, and Natasha N. Croom

    SECTION I
    Historical overview: Situating (Counter)Stories in the Academy

  3. Twenty Years Later ... The Narrative for Black Women Remains the Same, or Does It?

  4. Reitumetse O. Mabokela and Yeukai A. Mlambo


  5. Reimagining Black Feminist Epistemology and Praxis: Reflecting on the Contemporary and Evolving Conceptual Framework of One Black Faculty Woman's Academic Life

  6. Sheila T. Gregory


  7. Maids of Academe in Historically White Institutions: Revisited Against the Backdrop of 'Black Lives Matter'

  8. Debra A. Harley


  9. The Black Woman is God: Cultivating the Power of a Disruptive Presence

  10. Emerald Templeton
    SECTION II
    Utility of Black Feminist Epistemologies, Research, and Praxis

  11. What Black Cyberfeminism Teaches Us About Black Women on College Campuses

  12. Shawna Patterson-Stephens and Nadrea R. Njoku

  13. Uprooting the Prevalence of Misogynoir in Counselor Education

  14. Olivia T. Ngadjui


  15. Intersectionality Methodology and the Black Women Committed to 'Write-Us' Resistance

  16. Chayla Haynes, Saran Stewart, Evette L. Allen Moore, Nicole M. Joseph, and Lori D. Patton


  17. Advancing African Dance as a Practice of Freedom

  18. Shani Collins and Truth Hunter


  19. Spirit Murder: Black Women's Realities in the Academy

  20. Ebony J. Aya


  21. Sista Circles with SistUH Scholars: Socializing Black Women Doctoral Students

  22. Tiffany J. Davis and April L. Peters
    SECTION III
    Black Feminist Praxis Enacted: Journeying Toward Reappointment, Tenure, and Promotion

  23. #BlackInTheIvory: Utilizing Twitter to Explore Black Womxn's Experiences in the Academy

  24. Christina Wright Fields and Katrina M. Overby


  25. Repurposing My Status as an Outsider Within: A Black Feminist Scholar-Pracademic's Journey to Becoming an Invested Indifferent

  26. Nicole M. West


  27. Navigating a Womanist Caring Framework: Centering Womanist Geographies within Social Foundations for Black Academic Survival

  28. Taryrn T. C. Brown and E. Nichole Murray


  29. Black Feminist Thought from Theory to Praxis: "This is MY LIFE"

  30. Tiffany L. Steele


  31. How Positionality and Intersectionality Impact Black Women's Faculty Teaching Narratives: Grounded Histories

  32. Rhonda C. Hylton
    SECTION IV
    Canary in the Coal Mine: Journeying from Associate to Academic Administrator and Full Professor

  33. Supporting Black Womyn Associate Professors to the Full Professorship

  34. Stacey D. Garrett and Natasha N. Croom


  35. Black Women in Academic Leadership: Reflections of One Department Chair's Journey in Engineering

  36. Meseret F. Hailu and Monica F. Cox


  37. In Conversation: Engaging (with) the Narratives of Two Black Women Full Professor Leaders

Christa J. Porter, V. Thandi Sulé, and Natasha N. Croom
Enact, Discard, and Transform: Black Women's Agentic Epistemology
V. Thandi Sulé
Afterword
Christa J. Porter, V. Thandi Sulé, and Natasha N. Croom

About the Editors
About the Contributors

Summary

This edited volume bridges together foundational and contemporary intergenerational, interdisciplinary voices to elucidate Black feminist epistemologies and praxis.

Report

In [this book] you will see/feel/hear Black women scholars (as educators, mentors, advocates, sisters, daughters, and mothers) take up space, and concomitantly, refuse space....Throughout this text [Black women academicians] boldly engage in narrative inquiry, storytelling, poetry, and prose as cultural productions that serve to speak against dominant narratives that attempt to render Black women intellectual activists invisible and erase [them] from the historical record.
--From the Foreword by Venus E. Evans-Winters, former Professor of Education at Illinois State University, USA, founder of Planet Venus, and creator of the Write Like A Scholar program.

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