Locating Themselves: Black Womxn’s Geographies of Professional Socialization

E. Alexander, Article Info
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This paper presents findings from a larger study that explored the relationship among Black graduate womxn’s (BGW) geospatial and social locations in their academic organizations, their professional socialization processes, and their abilities to access their desired career pipelines upon program completion. More specifically, it is concerned with manners in which Black womxn (co-)construct geographies for their professional growth that (a) retain Black womxnhood at their centers – and in doing so, (b) challenge academia’s dominant discourses about students’ socialization processes and outcomes. The study took place in a highly ranked college of education (“the College”), at a highly regarded predominately-white public research institution in the American Midwest (“Midwest”). I conducted the study using a bricolage approach. Black Critical Race Theory, postcolonialism, and ideas about everyday resistance informed the paper’s methodology. The findings illustrate a theorizing of Black womxn’s created geographies as sites of resistance, and their liberatory imaginations, against anti-Black and colonial violence in the education academy. They also offer implications for how academia must evolve its understandings, structures, locations, and practices of graduate studies to be more responsive to the evolving needs of a diversifying population of learners and professionals.
定位自己:黑人女性职业社会化的地理学
本文介绍了一项大型研究的结果,该研究探讨了黑人毕业生女性(BGW)在学术组织中的地理空间和社会位置、她们的专业社会化过程以及她们在课程完成后获得理想职业管道的能力之间的关系。更具体地说,它关注的是黑人女性(共同)为自己的职业成长构建地理的方式(a)保持黑人女性的中心地位,并在这样做的过程中(b)挑战学术界关于学生社会化过程和结果的主导话语。这项研究在一所排名很高的教育学院(“学院”)进行,该学院位于美国中西部(“中西部”)一所备受推崇的以白人为主的公共研究机构。我用拼凑的方法进行了这项研究。黑人批判种族理论、后殖民主义和关于日常抵抗的思想影响了论文的方法论。这些发现说明了一种理论,即黑人妇女创造了作为抵抗场所的地理,以及她们对教育学院中反黑人和殖民暴力的解放想象。它们还为学术界如何发展其对研究生学习的理解、结构、地点和实践提供了启示,以更好地响应多样化学习者和专业人士不断变化的需求。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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