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6. “Doomed to Be Both a Witness and a Participant”: The Shared Vulnerability of Black Students and Black Teachers
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface: A New Grammar for Black Education vii
- Introduction: Blackness and the Art of Teaching 1
- 1. Between Coffle and Classroom: Carter G. Woodson as a Student and Teacher, 1875–1912 26
- 2. “The Association . . . Is Standing Like the Watchman on the Wall”: Fugitive Pedagogy and Black Institutional Life 62
- 3. A Language We Can See a Future In: Black Educational Criticism as Theory in Its Own Right 93
- 4. The Fugitive Slave as a Folk Hero in Black Curricular Imaginations: Constructing New Scripts of Knowledge 126
- 5. Fugitive Pedagogy as a Professional Standard: Woodson’s “Abroad Mentorship” of Black Teachers 159
- 6. “Doomed to Be Both a Witness and a Participant”: The Shared Vulnerability of Black Students and Black Teachers 199
- Conclusion: Black Schoolteachers and the Origin Story of Black Studies 229
- Notes 243
- Acknowledgments 295
- Index 299
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface: A New Grammar for Black Education vii
- Introduction: Blackness and the Art of Teaching 1
- 1. Between Coffle and Classroom: Carter G. Woodson as a Student and Teacher, 1875–1912 26
- 2. “The Association . . . Is Standing Like the Watchman on the Wall”: Fugitive Pedagogy and Black Institutional Life 62
- 3. A Language We Can See a Future In: Black Educational Criticism as Theory in Its Own Right 93
- 4. The Fugitive Slave as a Folk Hero in Black Curricular Imaginations: Constructing New Scripts of Knowledge 126
- 5. Fugitive Pedagogy as a Professional Standard: Woodson’s “Abroad Mentorship” of Black Teachers 159
- 6. “Doomed to Be Both a Witness and a Participant”: The Shared Vulnerability of Black Students and Black Teachers 199
- Conclusion: Black Schoolteachers and the Origin Story of Black Studies 229
- Notes 243
- Acknowledgments 295
- Index 299