Vocalizing Silenced Voices: White Supremacy, social caste, cultural hegemony, and narratives to overcome trauma and social injustice

Author:   Emily Hines ,  Sapna Thapa ,  Virginia Lea
Publisher:   Peter Lang Publishing Inc
Edition:   New edition
ISBN:  

9781433152191


Pages:   228
Publication Date:   31 July 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Vocalizing Silenced Voices: White Supremacy, social caste, cultural hegemony, and narratives to overcome trauma and social injustice


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Overview

In this book, we argue that authoritarian forces are working harder than ever to maintain, reinstate, and pass laws and policies that are antithetical to a kind, equitable, and socially just society that meets all of its citizens’ needs. American cultural hegemony—the dissemination process by which people are persuaded through laws and policies, institutional and cultural ideologies, norms, values, and practices to privilege the interests of powerful, disproportionately white, highstatus, and wealthy individuals and families—is ubiquitous. We learn to take for granted that the capitalist, social caste system in which we live, in largely segregated, racial, ethnic, and social class communities, is the best and fairest of all possible systems and just ‘the way things are.’ For example, large numbers of media and educational programs sell white supremacy, racism, social caste, sexism, and other forms of discrimination, as normal, natural, and common sense. Few schools teach children to become critically conscious of the hegemonic process by which social hierarchy in the United States has been handed down over more than four hundred years. Our research in this book names some of the above-mentioned laws, policies, and ways of framing reality that maintain the inequitable system in which we live, and silence and traumatize students, faculty, staff , and social justice activists in education and beyond. It also includes some alternative narratives being enacted by extraordinary educators, supporting collective action, critical consciousness, accountability, hope, equity, and social justice. Despite some social change, social caste continues to de- ne our lives. So, those of us who value democracy, equity, and social justice need to contribute, collectively and individually, to help our students and communities see through the gaslighting that conceals the lack of historical and current equity in our society—in other words, to recognize how cultural hegemony works to reproduce inequities.

Full Product Details

Author:   Emily Hines ,  Sapna Thapa ,  Virginia Lea
Publisher:   Peter Lang Publishing Inc
Imprint:   Peter Lang Publishing Inc
Edition:   New edition
Weight:   0.389kg
ISBN:  

9781433152191


ISBN 10:   1433152193
Pages:   228
Publication Date:   31 July 2024
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

"Dedications…………………………………………………………………………………………Table of Contents………..…………………………………………………………………………. List of Illustrations…………………………………………………………………………………. Preface………………………………………………………………………………………………Acknowledgements………………………………………………………………...……………… Endorsements……………………………………………………………………………………….Introduction………………………………………………………………………………………… Contextualizing silenced student, faculty, staff and community voices in higher education: White accountability and cultural hegemony Chapter One……………………………………………………………………………………...… Author narratives Chapter Two……………………………………………………………………………………...… Hegemonic Practices designed to maintain the U.S. social order Chapter Three………………………………………………………………………………………  Methodology: Research on silenced voices in the context of Covid 19 and anti-racist protest Chapter Four……………………………………………………………………………………… Research on silenced student voices: The African American, Hmong and Latinx cohorts Chapter Five……………………………………………………………………………………… Research on silenced student voices: The white cohort, white privilege and white accountability Chapter Six………………………………………………………………………………………… Campus Activism: ""E-race and e-radicate stereotypes"" Dialogues and ""Breaking Barriers"" Chapter Seven……………………………………………………………………………………… Campus and Community: Faculty, staff and community narratives about silencing Chapter Eight………………………………………………………………………………………. A Framework for identifying and interrupting how voices are silenced by racism, white supremacy and social caste Chapter Nine—Conclusions……………………………………………………………………….. Towards a more perfect vocalizing of silenced student, faculty, staff and community voices and white accountability Appendix 1………………………………………………………………………………………… Definitions of relevant theory used in the book Appendix 2………………………………………………………………………………………… Resources Appendix 3………………………………………………………………………………………… Information about the students who participated in our original research Notes on Contributors……………………………………………………………………………… List of Index Terms……………………………………………………………………………….."

Reviews

"“As politics rage within and outside the academy, this book lays bare the conscious and unconscious strategies used by anti-democratic, authoritarian individuals and groups who attempt to silence the voices and actions of social justice advocates, including education, ethnic studies and liberal arts students, faculty, staff, nonprofit workers and community members. The authors identify how whiteness, white supremacy, social caste and other powerful ideologies, interwoven with socio-economic structures, maintain gross inequities. They provide knowledge that is essential for the foundational work of pre-service and practicing teachers and the above actors, who struggle to meet the needs of their constituencies. I recommend this book and the dialogue to which it contributes about how we can build a more critically conscious and structurally just society.” Theresa Montano Professor, Chicana/o Studies, California State University Northridge. ""As censorship regimes ramp up today, it's important to remember that educational institutions have long functioned to silence diversity and criticality in various ways, even as such hegemony has always been contested in ways both obvious and not. In Vocalizing Silenced Voices, Lea, Thapa, and Hines provide us with a timely and practical framework for understanding who, how, where, and why institutions silence, as they humbly invite us into their own journey of creating spaces of resistance and movement building, showcasing through a rich tapestry of student voices that anti-oppressive education is messy, yes, but doable and enlivening as well."" Kevin Kumashiro Author of ""Surrendered: Why Progressive are Losing the Biggest Battles in Education"" “Vocalizing Silenced Voices gives readers a clear and urgent sense of what hegemony means and how it operates to maintain racially unjust social relations. In this book, Lea, Thapa, and Hines take us through their work attempting to make visible and disrupt cultural hegemony on a university campus. While their work uncovered wrenching stories of pain, silencing, and anger in a sea of white apathy, the authors also offer strategies of hope.”University Monterey Bay, Member, National Academy of Education Christine Sleeter Professor Emerita, California State University Monterey Bay, Member, National Academy of Education “An important and timely book based on a decade of ethnographic studies with students, faculty, staff, and community members by The Hegemony Project. The authors not only detail the history and presence of cultural hegemony and its strategies and tools -- such as racism, whiteness, white supremacy -- used to silence those critical voices that demand change and thereby threaten established socio-economic structure but also provide counter-silencing strategies to interrupt silencing and make all voices heard. A must-read.” Ana Cruz Professor of Education, St. Louis Community College."


"""As censorship regimes ramp up today, it's important to remember that educational institutions have long functioned to silence diversity and criticality in various ways, even as such hegemony has always been contested in ways both obvious and not. In Vocalizing Silenced Voices, Lea, Thapa, and Hines provide us with a timely and practical framework for understanding who, how, where, and why institutions silence, as they humbly invite us into their own journey of creating spaces of resistance and movement building, showcasing through a rich tapestry of student voices that anti-oppressive education is messy, yes, but doable and enlivening as well."" Kevin Kumashiro Author of ""Surrendered: Why Progressive are Losing the Biggest Battles in Education"" “As politics rage within and outside the academy, this book lays bare the conscious and unconscious strategies used by anti-democratic, authoritarian individuals and groups who attempt to silence the voices and actions of social justice advocates, including education, ethnic studies and liberal arts students, faculty, staff, nonprofit workers and community members. The authors identify how whiteness, white supremacy, social caste and other powerful ideologies, interwoven with socio-economic structures, maintain gross inequities. They provide knowledge that is essential for the foundational work of pre-service and practicing teachers and the above actors, who struggle to meet the needs of their constituencies. I recommend this book and the dialogue to which it contributes about how we can build a more critically conscious and structurally just society.” Theresa Montano Professor, Chicana/o Studies, California State University Northridge. “Vocalizing Silenced Voices gives readers a clear and urgent sense of what hegemony means and how it operates to maintain racially unjust social relations. In this book, Lea, Thapa, and Hines take us through their work attempting to make visible and disrupt cultural hegemony on a university campus. While their work uncovered wrenching stories of pain, silencing, and anger in a sea of white apathy, the authors also offer strategies of hope.”University Monterey Bay, Member, National Academy of Education Christine Sleeter Professor Emerita, California State University Monterey Bay, Member, National Academy of Education “An important and timely book based on a decade of ethnographic studies with students, faculty, staff, and community members by The Hegemony Project. The authors not only detail the history and presence of cultural hegemony and its strategies and tools -- such as racism, whiteness, white supremacy -- used to silence those critical voices that demand change and thereby threaten established socio-economic structure but also provide counter-silencing strategies to interrupt silencing and make all voices heard. A must-read.” Ana Cruz Professor of Education, St. Louis Community College."


Author Information

Virginia Lea, Ph.D, is Executive Director of the Educultural Foundation, and Professor of Education Emerita at Sonoma State University and the University of Wisconsin-Stout. Her several books, articles and curricula focus on unmasking cultural hegemony and white supremacy, and contributing to greater equity, social justice, antiracism, and educulturalism. Dr. Sapna Thapa is an Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Urban Early Childhood Teacher Education at Metro State University in Saint Paul, Minnesota. Her research areas focus on cross-cultural investigations of equity, quality, and diversity in early childhood teacher education. Her publications include articles related to policies on equity and quality in early childhood education and how globalization has raised the expectations of readiness for young children. Emily Hines, Ed.D, is a Professor of Reading at the University of WisconsinStout. She facilitates graduate reading programs and online professional development for K-12 educators. Emily’s research focus is literacy and diversity, where she believes the two intersect and are interdependent. Emily continues to grow and develop in her cultural competence and antiracism efforts.

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