Being White Today's suggested approaches guide readers to make strategic choices for themselves and others that resist white nationalist recruitment and reveal the benefits of antiracist appeals.
Being White Today's suggested approaches guide readers to make strategic choices for themselves and others that resist white nationalist recruitment and reveal the benefits of antiracist appeals.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Shelly Tochluk is a professor at Mount Saint Mary's University-Los Angeles. She is the author of Witnessing Whiteness: The Need to Talk About Race and How to Do It and Living in the Tension: The Quest for a Spiritualized Racial Justice. Free, downloadable workshop agendas and handouts aligned with each book are available at ShellyTochluk.com. Shelly volunteers with AWARE-LA (Alliance of White Anti-Racists Everywhere-Los Angeles). For over a decade, she has co-produced AWARE-LA's 4-day summer institute titled, Unmasking Whiteness, which leads white people into a deeper understanding of their personal relationship to race, white privilege, and systemic racism. Christine Saxman founded Saxman Consulting in the spring of 2020 where she provides racial and social justice training, facilitation, and coaching for educational, corporate, not-for-profit, and government organizations. She is a co-author of Western State Center's toolkit, Confronting Conspiracy Theories and Organized Bigotry at Home: A Guide for Parents and Caregivers . She also works on staff for the National SEED Project (Seeking Education Equity and Diversity). Prior to spending two years as an equity transformation specialist at Courageous Conversations About Race, Christine was an educator and equity leader at a suburban school district in Illinois. In 2016, she received recognition as an Illinois Golden Apple Finalist and Teacher of Distinction.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements Chapter One: Deciding on a Direction: Which Way Do We Go? Chapter Two: Mapping the Road Ahead: Toward a Positive, Antiracist White Identity Chapter Three: Encountering the Other: Contact Chapter Four: Moral Dilemmas: Disintegration Chapter Five: Defending Whiteness: Disintegration Chapter Six: Toward Antiracism: Disintegration Chapter Seven: Retreating into Whiteness: Reintegration Chapter Eight: Emerging Antiracism: Reintegration Chapter Nine:False Confidence: Pseudo-Independence Chapter Ten: Transformation: Immersion/Emersion Chapter Eleven: Positive Antiracist White Identity: Autonomy Chapter Twelve: It's Okay to Be White: Autonomy