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El. knyga: Narratives of South Asian and South Asian American Social Justice Educators

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Narratives of South Asian and South Asian American Social Justice Educators carries the voices of faculty in higher education. Caught between the stereotypes of the model minority and invisibleness, the authors narrate their triumphs, trials, and tribulations as social justice educators in US teacher education and allied fields. Their autoethnography-based narratives substantiate that a post-racial America is far from over. Stemming from their experiences in classrooms and the community, the authors offer usable strategies to educators and administrators, with the objective of creating a socially just society.

Recenzijos

Profoundly startling are these humble, generous stories that reflect both universality and uniqueness in the journeys and lifework of scholars at the cutting edge of anti-oppressive education. Anita Rao Mysore and colleagues offer us a collection of Narratives of South Asian and South Asian American Social Justice Educators that is both compelling and unsettling, both eye-opening and inspiring, both lyrical and interventionist. Their narratives teach -- and show us just how much more we have to learn. -- Kevin Kumashiro, editor of "Troubling Intersections of Race and Sexuality: Queer Students of Color and Anti-Oppressive Education" Narratives of South Asian and South Asian American Social Justice Educators is a timely and powerful book that brings together many leading scholars from the South Asian diaspora in North America. With their focus on the politics of justice, the life stories gathered here offer a rich and politically important challenge to stereotypes of South Asians. -- Wayne Au, University of Washington Bothell

Foreword xi
Christine Sleeter
Acknowledgments xv
Introduction xvii
Anita Rao Mysore
SECTION 1 EXPERIENCES OF SOCIAL JUSTICE EDUCATORS WHO WERE BORN IN THE US
1(22)
Chapter One The Necessity of Critical Femtoring: Practicing DesiCrit as a Punjabi American Professor
3(12)
Dimpal Jain
Chapter Two Navigating South Asian/Desi Identity as a Teacher Educator in Silicon Valley
15(8)
Saili S. Kulkarni
SECTION 2 EXPERIENCES OF SOCIAL JUSTICE EDUCATORS WHO IMMIGRATED TO THE US AS CHILDREN
23(28)
Chapter Three "The game is rigged": Promoting economic literacy to fight inequity
25(16)
Anand R. Marri
Chapter Four Roots and Branches: (Always) Becoming a Social Justice Educator Committed to Anti-racist Teaching and Research
41(10)
Anita Chikkatur
SECTION 3 EXPERIENCES OF SOCIAL JUSTICE EDUCATORS WHO IMMIGRATED TO THE US FOR HIGHER EDUCATION
51(62)
Chapter Five Grappling with the Complexities of Decolonization, Equity, and Education Betwixt and Between: Some Thoughts from a South Asian American Scholar
53(10)
Nina Asher
Chapter Six Experiencing the Margins as Freedom and Limitation: A First Generation Immigrant Perspective
63(12)
Raji Swaminathan
Chapter Seven Navigating Diversity Faultlines as a South Asian Immigrant Multicultural Teacher Educator
75(16)
Dilys Schoorman
Chapter Eight My Diverse Self: Learning, Unlearning and ReLearning
91(14)
Hema Ramanathan
Chapter Nine Looking Back, Looking Forward
105(8)
Anita Rao Mysore
Index 113(8)
About the Contributors 121
Anita Rao Mysore is associate professor at Christ University, Bengaluru, India.