“‘You cannot come to this country’—that's what the government says sometimes, when you’re Brown”: African American children's critical literacies and emergent solidarity

IF 1.3 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood Pub Date : 2023-06-01 DOI:10.1177/14639491231176898
Wintre Foxworth Johnson
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Abstract

Decades of research demonstrate that young children make meaning about race and racism. Yet there remains a dearth of scholarship about whether and how African American children are thinking across racial and ethnic difference to make sense of systemic inequities. Moreover, there are but a handful of scholars who have documented the ways that children and youth engage in acts of solidarity. Extending the growing body of literature that privileges young children of color's critical perspectives, this article examines African American first-graders’ sociopolitical awareness; in particular, it explores how they expressed their understanding that racial discrimination undergirded contemporary US immigration policies. These data reveal that the children possessed a capacity for demonstrating solidarity with other non-white people, in that they named and critiqued the marginalization experienced by immigrant communities of color. Drawing on Black feminist epistemologies, critical literacy, and critical consciousness, the author argues that the children's emergent solidarity can be understood through their three rhetorical moves: (1) interchanging Black and Brown people in name; (2) advancing a critical moral ideal by juxtaposing current and former political leaders; and (3) invoking knowledge of US history. Although popular media and political discourse seldom portray immigration as an issue that concerns Black communities in the US, African Americans have long understood that their own liberation is connected to that of other marginalized groups. As such, this article urges early childhood researchers to examine the nature of the questions being asked about young African American children's racial meaning-making practices and knowledges about belonging, equity, and inclusion within and outside schools.
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“‘你不能来这个国家’——当你是布朗人时,政府有时会这么说”:非裔美国儿童的批判性素养和新兴的团结
几十年的研究表明,幼儿能够理解种族和种族主义。然而,关于非裔美国儿童是否以及如何跨越种族和民族差异来理解系统性不平等的问题,仍然缺乏学术研究。此外,只有少数学者记录了儿童和青年参与团结行动的方式。本文考察了非裔美国一年级学生的社会政治意识。特别是,它探讨了他们如何表达他们的理解,即种族歧视是当代美国移民政策的基础。这些数据表明,孩子们具有与其他非白人团结一致的能力,因为他们指出并批评有色人种移民社区所经历的边缘化。借鉴黑人女性主义认识论、批判读写能力和批判意识,作者认为,儿童的涌现的团结可以通过他们的三种修辞动作来理解:(1)黑人和棕色人种在名义上的互换;(2)通过将现任和前任政治领导人并列,推进一种批判性的道德理想;(3)唤起对美国历史的了解。尽管大众媒体和政治话语很少将移民描绘成一个与美国黑人社区有关的问题,但非洲裔美国人早就明白,他们自己的解放与其他边缘化群体的解放是联系在一起的。因此,这篇文章敦促幼儿研究人员研究被问及的问题的本质,这些问题涉及年轻的非裔美国儿童在学校内外的种族意义形成实践和关于归属感、公平和包容的知识。
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来源期刊
Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood
Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
8.30%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood (CIEC) is a peer-reviewed international research journal. The journal provides a forum for researchers and professionals who are exploring new and alternative perspectives in their work with young children (from birth to eight years of age) and their families. CIEC aims to present opportunities for scholars to highlight the ways in which the boundaries of early childhood studies and practice are expanding, and for readers to participate in the discussion of emerging issues, contradictions and possibilities.
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