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Showing all 15 results Save | Export
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H. Samy Alim – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2023
This article theorizes Hip Hop as Black liberatory practice by explicating the links between Hip Hop knowledges, pedagogies, and futures. I draw on multiple research and classroom experiences, including co-teaching a course with pioneering Hip Hop artist Chuck D of Public Enemy. The course examined Hip Hop culture as an extension of Black freedom…
Descriptors: Interviews, African American Culture, Music, Poetry
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Brian Mooney; Joniesha Hickson; Aaleah Oliver; Jahvel Pierce; April Baker-Bell – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2023
In this article, co-authors Brian Mooney, Joniesha Hickson, Aaleah Oliver, and Jahvel Pierce discuss language, race, and education with author April Baker-Bell. Speaking from their perspectives as teachers, scholars, researchers, poets, spiritual leaders, and cultural workers, their experiences address the importance of sustaining a Black…
Descriptors: African American Culture, African Americans, Black Dialects, Music
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Davis, Camea; McTier, Syreeta Ali – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2023
Grounded in the Black intellectual tradition, this article explores how Black youth and teachers of Black youth operationalize resistance ideologies to combat hegemonic narratives about Black youth in U.S. urban school spaces. Using data from four Black youth and teacher participants, we applied a priori coding based on Bernard and Agozino's…
Descriptors: African Americans, African American Students, Resistance (Psychology), Urban Schools
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Adewumi, Samuel Idowu; Kayode, Moses Bolawale – International Journal of Education and Literacy Studies, 2014
Black American Literature is a microcosm of the history of the black people's presence on the American continent as it is known today. The literature of the Black Americans cannot be fully separated from the experience of Slavery and Racism which characterized their lives as a community of people whose social, economic and political privileges are…
Descriptors: African American Literature, Poetry, African American History, Slavery
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Brown, Angela – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2014
It has been created within the larger realm culture, in that "Black methodology differs from most colonial differences by members of a minority community who reside within a nation of cultural biases."
Descriptors: African American Literature, Poetry, Fiction, Authors
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Shanahan, Maureen G. – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2010
Malaika Favorite's "Furious Flower Poetry Quilt" (2004) is an acrylic painting that depicts 24 portraits of leading poets of the African Diaspora. Commissioned by Dr Joanne Gabbin, English professor and director of the Furious Flower Poetry Center at James Madison University, the painting is part of a larger programme of poetry…
Descriptors: United States History, Poets, African American History, Slavery
Yenika-Agbaw, Vivian, Ed.; Napoli, Mary, Ed. – Peter Lang New York, 2011
The essays in this collection discuss multicultural issues in children's and adolescent literature, focusing particularly on African and African American cultures. They challenge everyone's understanding of what, in an age of globalization, multicultural texts really are. Cumulatively, these essays illustrate multicultural literature's power to…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Adolescent Literature, African American Culture, African Culture
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William­-White, Lisa – Qualitative Research in Education, 2013
Here, Spoken Word poetics (William-White, 2011 a, 2011 b; William-White & White, 2011 ; William-White, 201 3) is utilized here to interpret and reflect on racialized violence and homicide in the United States. African American youth, particularly in urban communities, are disproportionately affected by violent crime, namely homicide when…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Poetry, Personal Narratives, African Americans
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View, Jenice L. – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2013
In the period after the 1896 U.S. Supreme Court decision (Plessy v. Ferguson), "white" supremacy was codified and reinforced through law, custom, and mob violence. Despite this, African-descended women artists in the Western Hemisphere committed the revolutionary act of declaring, "I am; I am here; I am here remaking/reimagining the…
Descriptors: African Americans, Females, African American History, United States History
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Moody-Ramirez, Mia; Scott, Lakia M. – Journal of Media Literacy Education, 2015
Using a feminist lens and a constructivist approach as the theoretical framework, we used rap lyrics and videos to help college students explore mass media's representation of the "independent" Black woman and the concept of "independence" in general. Students must be able to formulate their own concept of independence to…
Descriptors: Music, Popular Culture, Urban Culture, Poetry
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Low, Bronwen E. – Urban Education, 2010
Although the number of calls to integrate Hip-Hop culture into school curricula is growing, little attention is being paid to the reluctance of teachers and administrators to forge relationships between the cultures of school and of youth. This article explores some of the difficulties inherent in the relationships between Hip Hop and schooling,…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Music, Poetry, Popular Culture
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Agosto, Vonzell – Journal of Negro Education, 2008
Freedom Schools, which operated during 1964 after the collaborative efforts of several Civil Rights organizations, provided an opportunity to understand how students can drive the curriculum to meet individual and collective needs within a community. The presence and use of poetry throughout the Freedom Schools was mysterious, given that it is…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Poetry, Cultural Education, Community Needs
Mehta, Diane – Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, 2006
Thomas Sayers Ellis, assistant professor of creative writing at New York's Sarah Lawrence College, is one of many scholars fighting for the soul of Black poetry, a struggle that takes place largely off-campus. Unless one is accepted into a top-level graduate poetry program, such as Boston University's program or the Iowa Writing Workshop, a poet's…
Descriptors: Poetry, Writing Workshops, Black Colleges, Creative Writing
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Fisher, Maisha T. – Yearbook of the National Society for the Study of Education, 2006
In this chapter response, the author revisits young men and women whose voluntary writing and visual literacy practices helped teachers, teacher educators, and literacy researchers rethink the "funds of knowledge" urban youth bring to classroom communities. She examines transformations of everyday spaces into teaching and learning…
Descriptors: Visual Literacy, Literacy, Urban Youth, Teacher Educators
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Fisher, Maisha T – Written Communication, 2004
In this article, the author builds on McHenry and Heaths study of the "literate" and the "literary" and McHenry's research on "forgotten readers" by examining the often undocumented literacy traditions and practices of men and women of African descent. First, the author traces the legacy of blended traditions of both written and spoken words in…
Descriptors: Poetry, Language Arts, Literacy, African Americans