InflexionPoint Podcast: Cultivating Change from the Inside Out: The Need for Historical and Racial Literacy
01/04/2023 03:00 pm PST
Anita, Mavis, and Gail discuss the the first year of InflexionPoint Podcast in terms of the most personally impactful and transformational episodes. They describe the show as influential in terms of historical and racial literacy.
Racial Literacy:
(1) a concept developed by sociologist France Winddance Twine, UC Santa Barbara Dept of Sociology. She describes it as "a form of racial socialization and antiracist training that ... parents of African-descent children practiced in their efforts to defend their children against racism" in her research done in the United Kingdom with mixed-race families.
(2) a skill and practice by which individuals can probe the existence of racism and examine the effects of race and institutionalized systems on their experiences and representation in US society.
Becoming racially literate requires that, as educators (and humans), we can:
- Engage with the emotional content of any conversation that has a focus on race
- Welcome personal narratives and the lived experiences of all who are involved in the race conversation
- Talk confidently about our own racial identities
- Feel confident in creating and engaging in healthy and reciprocal cross-racial relationships
- Challenge racism at the individual, group and systemic level
Historical Literacy:
The past informs the present to empower the future.
The past and present, in many ways, influence our future. Paulo Freire, in his book Pedagogy of the Oppressed, says: “Looking at the past must only be a means of understanding more clearly what and who you are. So, you can build the future more wisely."
What Good is History? History matters because history is the fragile tether that not only connects us to what and who came before us, it is by way of history that “then” has become “now.” Asking questions of history brings perspective, knowledge, maybe even lessons.
Episode giveaways:
- First Annual Antiracism Activation Summit 2023, January 9-13. Join this no-cost virtual summit experience based on 5 themes: Action. Discomfort. Allyship. Community. Holistic. Registration closes January 6 at 11:59 PM ET https://theplacetosoar.com/aras2023
- National Association of Independent Schools. When Race Enters the Room: Toward Racial Literacy in America’s Schools https://www.nais.org/learn/independent-ideas/december-2015/when-race-enters-the-room-toward-racial-literacy/
- The Black Curriculum and Head of Equality, Inclusion and Culture at the British Medical Association, Aishnine Benjamin. The Cost of Not Being Racially Literate https://www.integritycoaching.co.uk/blog/race-equality-and-diversity/not-racially-literate/
- What Good Is History?: https://calhum.org/on-the-importance-of-historical-literacy-what-good-is-history/
- Thinking Like a Historian https://medium.com/literate-schools/thinking-historically-54c6c37d6d64
- Discover ASALH: Association for the Study of African American Life and History. ASALH’s mission is to create and disseminate knowledge about Black History, to be, in short, the nexus between the Ivory Tower and the global public. We labor in the service of Blacks and all humanity. https://asalh.org Dr. Edna B McKenzie Branch of ASALH in Pittsburgh PA https://ednabmckenziepgh-asalh.org
HOST
Anita Russell M.Ed
InflexionPoint Podcast: Cultivating Change from the Inside Out Antiracism Activation through Courage, Conversation, Relatioship, and Accountabiliy 1st & 3...
Find out more »CO-HOSTS
Mavis Bauman
InflexionPoint Podcast: Cultivating Change from the Inside Out Creating a Brave Space for Conversations about Personal Transformation, Racism, and Accountability...
Find out more »Gail Hunter LCSW
InflexionPoint Podcast: Cultivating Change from the Inside Out Creating a Brave Space for Conversations about Personal Transformation, Racism, and Accountability...
Find out more »