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This book provides a comprehensive exploration of Black women academics legacy of knowledge production and intellectual thought, while balancing the intersecting pressures of social, familial, and academic responsibilities. Through the (her)stories of Black scholars, educators, activists, and mothers, it highlights how Black mothers in the academy navigate the interconnectedness of human rights, educational access, scholarship, pedagogy, and community service. Grounded in the intersectional experiences of Black womanhood particularly mothering and othermothering this book illustrates the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book provides a comprehensive exploration of Black women academics legacy of knowledge production and intellectual thought, while balancing the intersecting pressures of social, familial, and academic responsibilities. Through the (her)stories of Black scholars, educators, activists, and mothers, it highlights how Black mothers in the academy navigate the interconnectedness of human rights, educational access, scholarship, pedagogy, and community service. Grounded in the intersectional experiences of Black womanhood particularly mothering and othermothering this book illustrates the profound impact of gender and race within higher education.

Edited by two Black motherscholars, this book centers the narratives of Black women in academia, amplifying their voices in response to the silencing of their experiences. It challenges institutions to reimagine policies and practices that support Black women scholars, addressing how they disrupt traditional understandings ofknowledge production, Black womanhood, and motherhood in predominantly white academic spaces. This book explores five key themes: 1) Black motherscholars joy and wholeness as a form of resistance, 2) challenging white-centric notions of mothering and othermothering, 3) intergenerational experiences of Black motherscholars, 4) the impact of daughtering on their academic lives, and 5) revolutionary mothering in hostile academic environments.

This book incorporates a range of contributions, including empirical research, conceptual works, and creative expressions such as photography, and poetry, incorporating gender-expansive experiences of Black motherscholars beyond heteronormative perspectives. This book calls on higher education leaders to confront white patriarchy and the exploitation of Black women s labor, providing strategies to support revolutionary mothering in academia. It amplifies Black motherscholars call for radical care and connection, fostering a more equitable academic future for Black women and their children.
Autorenporträt
Crystasany R. Turner, Ph.D. (she/her/ella), is Assistant Professor of Teacher Education at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Rooted in Black feminist epistemologies, her research and scholarship highlight the perspectives of Black women educators and their cultural knowledge as manifested in their care and education of Children of Color. Her teaching and research focus includes Black feminist epistemologies, early childhood education for social justice, and spirit-centered pedagogies. Her work interrogates imbalanced social power, institutional inequities, and systemic oppression affecting diverse children and families. Dr. Turner s scholarship has been published in Race Ethnicity and Education, the Journal of African American Women and Girls in Education, the Journal of Teacher Education, and the Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Social Justice in Education amongst others.

Meghan L. Green, Ed.D. (she/her), is Assistant Professor of Raciolinguistic Justice in Early Childhood Teacher Education at the Erikson Institute. As an arts-based qualitative researcher, she uses multiple modes of creative representation to reflect on her positionality and to craft her story as a cis Black queer woman engaging in critically informed research methodologies within this time and space. Her scholarship centers Black feminist thought and endarkened feminist epistemology within early childhood settings, specifically highlighting the diverse lived experiences of Black early childhood educators through arts-based qualitative inquiry methods including, autoethnography, endarkened narrative inquiry, photovoice, and poetic inquiry. Her scholarly works have been published in journals such as the International Journal of Qualitative Methods, the Journal of African American Women and Girls in Education, Early Childhood Education Journal, Ethnic Studies Pedagogies, and Equity and Excellence in Education.