On Privilege, Fraudulence, and Teaching As Learning

On Privilege, Fraudulence, and Teaching As Learning

Selected Essays 1981--2019

McIntosh, Peggy

Taylor & Francis Inc

07/2019

222

Mole

Inglês

9780815354116

15 a 20 dias

399

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Part I: The Privilege Papers

A Letter about the Privilege Papers

1. White Privilege and Male Privilege: A Personal Account of Coming to See Correspondences Through Work in Women's Studies (1988)

2. White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack (1989)

3. Some Notes for Facilitators on Presenting My White Privilege Papers (2004, 2018)

4. Selection from "White Privilege, Color and Crime: A Personal Account" (1998)

5. Selection from "White Privilege: An Account to Spend" (2009)

6. White People Facing Race: Uncovering the Myths that Keep Racism in Place (2009)

Part II: The Fraudulence Papers

A Letter about the Fraudulence Papers

7. Feeling Like a Fraud, Part I (1985)

8. Selection from "Feeling Like A Fraud, Part II" (1989)

9. Selection from "Feeling Like a Fraud - Part III: Finding Authentic Ways of Coming into Conflict" (2000)

10. Feeling Like A Fraud, Part IV (2019)

Part III: The Phase Theory Papers

A Letter about Phase Theory

11. The Study of Women: Implications for Reconstructing the Liberal Arts Disciplines (1981)

12. Interactive Phases of Curricular Re-Vision: A Feminist Perspective (1983)

13. Selection from "Interactive Phases of Curricular and Personal Re-Vision with Regard to Race" (1990)

Part IV: The SEED Project Papers

A Letter about the National SEED Project

14. Selection from "Faculty-Centered Faculty Development" (1994)

[Peggy McIntosh and Emily Style]

15. Selection from "Social, Emotional, and Political Learning" (1999)

[Peggy McIntosh and Emily Style]

16. Selection from "Teacher Self-Knowledge: The Deeper Learning" (2015) [Peggy McIntosh, Hugo Mahabir, Bob Gordon, and Ruth Mendoza]

Part V Closing

A Closing Letter

Further Reading
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Combahee River Collective Statement;social justice;Hairdresser's Shop;women's studies;Professional Development;gender studies;Skin Color Privilege;white privilege;Phase Iii;anti-racist studies;Liberal Arts Disciplines;race studies;Jean Baker Miller;male privilege;Moebius;education;SEED Project;feminism;Unearned Advantage;feminist;Invisible Knapsack;pedagogy;power;Conferred;fraudulence;Wo;Unearned Entitlement;Personas;African American Coworkers;Moebius Strip;Follow;Unearned Privilege;Phase Theory;White Skin Privilege;Wellesley Centers;Impostor Syndrome;Privilege Systems