Who Look at Me?!: Shifting the Gaze of Education through Blackness, Queerness, and the Body

Author:   Durell M. Callier ,  Dominique C. Hill
Publisher:   Brill
Volume:   3
ISBN:  

9789004392236


Pages:   136
Publication Date:   17 January 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Who Look at Me?!: Shifting the Gaze of Education through Blackness, Queerness, and the Body


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Overview

Who Look at Me?!: Shifting the Gaze of Education through Blackness, Queerness, and the Body explores how we, as a society, see Blackness and in particular Black youth. Drawing on a range of sources, the authors argue that the ability to operationalize the sentiment that #BlackLivesMatter, requires seeing Blackness wholly, as queer, and as a site of subversive knowledge production. Continuing the work of June Jordan and Langston Hughes, and based on their work as a Black queer artist collective known as Hill L. Waters, Who Look at Me?! provides alternative tools for reading about and engaging with the lived experiences of Black youth and educational research for and about Black youth. In this way, the book presents not only the possibilities of envisioning teaching and research practices but presents examples that embrace, celebrate, and make room for the fullness of Black and queer bodies and experiences. This work will appeal to those interested in emancipatory methodological and educational practices as well as interdisciplinary conversations related to sociocultural constructions of race and sexuality, politics of Blackness, and race in education.

Full Product Details

Author:   Durell M. Callier ,  Dominique C. Hill
Publisher:   Brill
Imprint:   Brill
Volume:   3
Weight:   0.383kg
ISBN:  

9789004392236


ISBN 10:   9004392238
Pages:   136
Publication Date:   17 January 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements Prologue Why Auto/Ethnography Education and Performance Now: Who Look at me, Now: Reflections on Being Seen Framing Shifting the Gaze The Origins of Shifting the Gaze in Our Work Shifting the Educational Gaze Now: Insisting on Pedagogies of Freedom, Creativity, and Praxis Tools to Engender Gaze Shifting Autoethnography and Education A Note to Our Read(er)s Organization of the Book Reflection Questions & Interactive Exercise Chapter 1: When You See Me: Notes on Terrible Educations Reflections Naming & Unlearning: Pedagogies of Resistance I Am, We Are, Before That: Letters to the Future Reflection Questions Chapter 2: Reflections on Bodies on Display: Exploring the Radical Potential of the Black, Queer Body Dimensions of Body Bodies on Display: Pleasure Learning through the Body: What Being on Display Taught Us Deep Creation Happens with/in the Feminine: A Lesson Reorienting the Gaze: Notes on Pleasure and Blended Scripting Conclusion Reflection Questions & Interactive Exercise Chapter 3: Looking Again: Collective Visions, Collective Sight/Seeing SOLHOT Lesson I: Just because...Don't Mean... SOLHOT Lesson II: Save Yourself First: Recollecting Dirty Work and Wreckless Theatrics Conclusion Reflection Questions Chapter 4: Answering the Call: Manifesting the Spirit of Auto/Ethnography The Contribution of Auto/Ethnography to Qualitative Research Manifesting & Autoethnography: Charting New Directions in the Field Reflection Questions & Interactive Exercise Chapter 5: When We Look at Each Other: An Auto/Ethnography of Togetherness Searching for Collectivity in Auto/Ethnography More than Collaboration, We Love Each Other: Coming to Collective Auto/Ethnography Reflection Questions Conclusion Shifting Sociocultural Gazes: Toward Seeing Blackness Anew Black Scenes/Seen Black Reflection Questions & Interactive Exercise Epilogue Dear Uncle Jimmy References About the Authors Index

Reviews

Who Look at Me?! is a book not only to shift the field, but our humanity. To see Black queer bodies wholeness and complexities at the same time. This book is a love poem of research addressed to the most vulnerable. - Bettina L. Love, Associate Professor, University of Georgia, Department of Educational Theory & Practice This text shudders with not only the brilliance of these young authors, but also the seismic times in which it has been forged. Do yourself a favor and go buy this book now. Better yet, buy two and give one to a colleague or friend who needs it. - Anne M. Harris, Associate Professor, Australian Research Council Future Fellow and RMIT University, Principal Research Fellow, School of Education and Digital Ethnography Research Centre


Who Look at Me?! is a book not only to shift the field, but our humanity. To see Black queer bodies wholeness and complexities at the same time. This book is a love poem of research addressed to the most vulnerable. - Bettina L. Love, Associate Professor, University of Georgia, Department of Educational Theory & Practice This text shudders with not only the brilliance of these young authors, but also the seismic times in which it has been forged. Do yourself a favor and go buy this book now. Better yet, buy two and give one to a colleague or friend who needs it. - Anne M. Harris, Associate Professor, Australian Research Council Future Fellow and RMIT University, Principal Research Fellow, School of Education and Digital Ethnography Research Centre


Author Information

Durell M. Callier, Ph.D., is an assistant professor of cultural and critical youth studies in the Department of Educational Leadership at Miami University. Dominique C. Hill, Ph.D., is the 2017 recipient of the Illinois Distinguished Qualitative Dissertation Award in experimental design and a visiting assistant professor of Black Studies at Amherst College.

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