Understanding the Black Flame and Multigenerational Education Trauma: Toward a Theory of the Dehumanization of Black Students

Understanding the Black Flame and Multigenerational Education Trauma: Toward a Theory of the Dehumanization of Black Students

Understanding the Black Flame and Multigenerational Education Trauma: Toward a Theory of the Dehumanization of Black Students

Understanding the Black Flame and Multigenerational Education Trauma: Toward a Theory of the Dehumanization of Black Students

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Overview

Unlike any text to date, this revolutionary study surveys Black research and literature to determine the processes formal education uses to dehumanize Black students. This is a socio-historical analysis of the Black Flame trilogy (BFT), W. E. B. Du Bois’s unparalleled, thirty-year study of Atlanta, Georgia from Black Reconstruction (1860 – 1880) to 1956. W.E.B. Du Bois is one of the most prescient sociologists of the twentieth century in his research of Black people in America. These ground-breaking novels establish racialization, colonization, and globalization as processes that continue to dehumanize Black students in education. Africana critical theory (ACT), critical race theory (CRT), and Post Traumatic Slave Syndrome (PTSS) privilege the research, voice, and experiences of Blacks. These theoretical frames speak to the pain and effects of the impact of unchecked, gross, voyeuristic violence that helps define the White supremacist patriarchal culture in which we live.
Straight forward and direct, this book show how the processes of dehumanization contribute to the legacy of trauma White supremacy exacts upon Black people and their humanity. This study is aimed at highlighting the stark disparities in Black and White education over times. This book offers a candid look at how the myth of Black inferiority and the metaphor of the achievement gap describe conscious economic deprivation, mob violence and intimidation, and White supremacist curricula, yet continues to imply long-standing cultural notion of Blacks intellectual inferiority. This research is offered to help mitigate the multigenerational education trauma Blacks have experienced since Reconstruction to envision a educational system that is efficacious and socially just in the distribution of resources, expanding diversity in curricula, and exposing pedagogical biases that traumatize not only Black people but all people.



Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739179307
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 05/01/2014
Series: Critical Africana Studies
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 182
File size: 755 KB

About the Author

June C. Christian is a curriculum specialist, anti-bias trainer, and a social justice activist with a doctorate from the University of Missouri–St. Louis.

Table of Contents


Ninth Inning - Mary Rogers-Grantham
  1. Introduction: Toward a Theory of Dehumanization in Education
  2. Understanding Race, An Africana Philosophy of Education, and Lynching in the Classroom
  3. Understanding The Ordeal
  4. Schooling as Colonization, Meanwhile, Mansart Build a School
  5. The Color of the World
  6. Understanding the Black Flame
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