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20 Teaching Race, Conceptualizing Solidarity

  • Andrew Brooks
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Abstract

This chapter reflects on Stuart Hall’s 1980 essay ‘Teaching race’ in order to consider the challenges of critically teaching about race from the settler-colonial context of Australia and in the midst of an escalating culture war. It begins by historicizing contemporary attacks on race critical pedagogy and anti-racist movements before considering how we might approach the teaching of race today. Specifically, the chapter asks what is required in order for the classroom to be a site that both allows for a confrontation with naturalized manifestations of racism and creates the conditions for critical reflection and transformation. Anti-racist pedagogy is considered as that which requires a confrontation with the violence of racism, as well as a readiness to attend to the ways that this violence becomes manifest in the classroom, through discourse, received history, presumed knowledge and affect. The potential encounter with the violence of racism requires that the teacher approach the question of safety as an ongoing process and it is from this position that we can locate the possibility of anti-racist solidarity.

Abstract

This chapter reflects on Stuart Hall’s 1980 essay ‘Teaching race’ in order to consider the challenges of critically teaching about race from the settler-colonial context of Australia and in the midst of an escalating culture war. It begins by historicizing contemporary attacks on race critical pedagogy and anti-racist movements before considering how we might approach the teaching of race today. Specifically, the chapter asks what is required in order for the classroom to be a site that both allows for a confrontation with naturalized manifestations of racism and creates the conditions for critical reflection and transformation. Anti-racist pedagogy is considered as that which requires a confrontation with the violence of racism, as well as a readiness to attend to the ways that this violence becomes manifest in the classroom, through discourse, received history, presumed knowledge and affect. The potential encounter with the violence of racism requires that the teacher approach the question of safety as an ongoing process and it is from this position that we can locate the possibility of anti-racist solidarity.

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  1. Front Matter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Series Editors’ Preface vii
  4. List of Figures and Tables ix
  5. Notes on Contributors x
  6. Foreword xvii
  7. Acknowledgements xxi
  8. Introduction: Articulating a Critical Racial and Decolonial Liberatory Imperative for Our Times 1
  9. Going beyond ‘Decolonize the Curriculum’
  10. Being Woke to Anti-Intellectualism: Indigenous Resistance and Futures 13
  11. Decolonizing Australian Universities: Why Embedding Indigenous Content in the Curriculum Fails That Task 32
  12. Let’s Get Critical: Thinking with and beyond the ‘Dead White Men’ of Social Theory 49
  13. (De)constituting Settler Subjects: A Retrospective Critical Race-Decolonizing Account 62
  14. Being in the Classroom
  15. Shedding the Colonial Skin and Digging Deep as Decolonial Praxis 79
  16. Racially Literate Teacher Education: (Im)possibilities for Disrupting the Racial Silence 93
  17. In Conversation with Helena Liu: Redeeming Leadership – a Project of Critical Hope 111
  18. The Provocateur as Decolonial Praxis 123
  19. Doing Race in the Disciplines
  20. Decolonizing the Curriculum in the Colonial Debtscape 137
  21. Race-ing the Law 152
  22. Assembling Decolonial Anti-Racist Praxis from the Margins: Reflections from Critical Community Psychology 164
  23. Unravelling the Model Minority Myth and Breaking the Racial Silence: A Collaborative Critical Auto-Ethnography 178
  24. Counter-Storytelling as Critical Praxis 190
  25. Building Critical Racial and Decolonial Literacies beyond the Academy
  26. Incantation: Insurgent Texts as Decolonial Feminist Praxis 205
  27. Race at Work within Social Policy 227
  28. ‘The Sole Source of Truth’: Harnessing the Power of the Spoken Word through Indigenous Community Radio 246
  29. Resistance, Solidarity, Survival
  30. Death Can Be Clarifying: Considering the Forces That Move Us 261
  31. In Conversation with Yassir Morsi: Slow Ontology as Resistance 276
  32. Teaching Race, Conceptualizing Solidarity 290
  33. In Conversation with Alana Lentin: Racial Literacy – an Act of Solidarity 305
  34. Teacher/Decolonizer 317
  35. Index 322
Heruntergeladen am 16.10.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.56687/9781529234442-025/html
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