This collection of essays invites readers to think through critical
questions concerning anti-racism education, such as: How does
anti-racism education centre race as an analytic and simultaneously work
with multiple sites of oppression, without reifying hierarchies of
difference? How can anti-racism education be engaged to speak to
historical questions of power and privilege, within conventional
schooling practices? How do we recognize anti-racism education in its
many iterations?
In this book the authors explore the knowledge that constitutes
anti-racism education and the ways in which knowledge constitutive of
anti-racism education becomes embodied through particular pedagogues.
The authors are anti-racism educators with experiences in diverse
settings: the chapters cover various fields and socio-historic
geographies, address contemporary educational issues, and are situated
within personal-political, historical and philosophical conversations.
Anti-racism education is a discursive stance and steeped in politics
that shape and are shaped by everyday conversations, theories, and
practices. The essays in this collection work through many of the
possibilities and limitations of engaging in counter-hegemonic education
for transformative learning. Readers will discover lived experiences,
theory, practice and critical reflexivity.