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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
841

Afrofuturism, Womanist Phenomenology, and The Black Imagination of Independent Comicons: A Liberative Revisioning of Black Humanity

January 2019 (has links)
abstract: The world of speculative fiction infuses the soul with the hope of the imaginary. My dissertation examines Afrofuturistic liminal imaginary space and the ways it is experienced as life-giving spaces. The imaginary and the aesthetics it births are formularies for art forms that speak to the hope of a transformed future. Speculative fiction, although in the realm of the imaginary, is an enlivened approach to express in the present collective possibilities and hopes of the people within those very imagined futures. During the past three decades, particularly, Black speculative fiction has been increasingly at the core of the new cultural productions of literature, film, horror, comics, fantasy, and music which tell the story of African descendant people. Afrofuturism is an analytic for exploration of the liberative revisioning of Black humanity in the face of persistent practices of structural injustice. My project presents the phenomenological exploration of Black Speculative Thought (ST) as it comes alive through artistic liminal spaces of Afrofuturist comic and science fiction conventions. I argue that Black imaginary liminal spaces such as Comicon Culture offer respite, renewal, and locales for creative resistance to thwart persistent alienation and nihilism of Black humanity. Furthermore, it is within these spaces where intersubjective agency can be taken up as a countermeasure to the existential realities and dominant hegemonic existences of everyday life. I examine the process, events, and experience of Black imaginary as it comes alive as potentiated hope for alternative futures. My intention is to marshal the theoretical specters of Critical Afrofuturism, Africana Philosophy, and Womanist Thought in this task. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Women and Gender Studies 2019
842

The sista' network as the new underground railroad: African American women faculty successfully negotiating the road to tenure

Cooper, Tuesday La'Nette 01 January 2001 (has links)
This work is a qualitative inquiry into the lives and experiences of nine African American women faculty during various stages of the tenure process. This study finds that African American women faculty face challenges in the academy particularly as they relate to the unwritten rules and the institutional politics surrounding tenure. This work is weaved in African American feminist thought with the literatures on academic tenure and minority and women faculty experiences in the academy.
843

Afrocentric Pedagogy as a Transformative Educational Practice

Ra'oof, Miranda L. 01 July 2013 (has links)
This mixed-methods study analyzed the effectiveness of the practices and attitudes of selected African American teachers who use culturally relevant and responsive Afrocentric pedagogies as the instructional foundation for improved academic outcomes with their African American students. The theory of Afrocentricity was used as the philosophical framework to study their pedagogy. Afrocentricity is a mode of thought and practice in which in African people are placed at the center of their own history and culture; engages them as subjects rather than objects; and approaches them with respect for their interests, values, and perspectives (Asante 1980, 2003). Concepts employed from this theoretical framework provided a lens for the triangulation of qualitative and quantitative data collected and analyzed. The setting for this study was a private Afrocentric prekindergarten through 8th-grade school. The participants in this study were 3 African American teachers. Data collected and analyzed supported using culturally relevant and responsive pedagogy to produce improved academic outcomes for students of color (Boykin, 1984, 1994; Hale-Benson, 1986; King, 1991; Ladson-Billings, 1994; Shujaa, 1995; Villegas, 1991). Findings suggested that in selected academic settings improved academic performance occurred for African American students when teachers used culture relevant and responsive pedagogy. The following themes were embedded in the pedagogy: self-determination, academic empowerment, cultural empowerment, and family/community empowerment. The findings implied a need for teachers and teacher-training institutions to re-examine, recommit, and reinstitute culturally relevant and responsive pedagogy that respects and addresses the culture, education, and social improvement for positive academic outcomes for all children.
844

Sweet Spirit: The Pedagogical Relevance of the Black Church for African-American Males

Lucas, Brandi Odom 01 April 2014 (has links)
African-American student achievement is a pervasive problem for school communities. This qualitative research explores the Black Church’s role in the bicultural development of six African-American male students. Using the critical theory of biculturalism this study seeks to determine what aspects of the Black Church experience influence the African-American male’s ability to navigate the school environment and participate in school. This dissertation study utilized to complementary methodologies, testimonies, and witnessing, to document the students experiences in the school and church communities. Data analysis included holistic-content analysis. Findings indicate the Black Church was an effective vehicle for the empowering process of biculturation. Thought its critical teachings, cultural responsive care, and engaged pedagogy, the Black Church affirms the bicultural students and helps them contend with their personal experiences with oppressive individuals and structures. The findings support the need for the Black church to participate in the education reform efforts affecting African-American students. The findings also support a renewed focus on engaging teachers in the utilization of culturally responsive care in their interactions with African-American students.
845

EMPOWERMENT THROUGH ACKNOWLEDGEMENT:CONTEMPORARY STRING BANDS AND THE BLACK ROOTS MUSIC REVIVAL

Brown, Maya Olivia 27 August 2018 (has links)
No description available.
846

Strides Toward Equality: The Portrayal of Black Female Athletes in Children’s Picturebooks

Bruce, Rebekah May January 2018 (has links)
No description available.
847

The Addiction of Transparency: Observations on the Emotional Neurophysiology of Whiteness

Birge, Charles 22 July 2019 (has links)
No description available.
848

GENDERED RACISM: A PHENOMENOLOGICAL STUDY OF AFRICANAMERICAN FEMALE LEADERS IN COUNSELOR EDUCATION

Lester, Yvette Len 17 July 2019 (has links)
No description available.
849

Imagining Beyond the Body: The Speculative Erotic Power of the Flesh

Dixon, Lynette Mawolu 23 August 2019 (has links)
No description available.
850

“THE PEOPLE WHO NEED US READ BETWEEN THE LINES”: THE FACES OF EUGENIC IDEOLOGY IN THE POST-WWII UNITED STATES

Fair, Alexandra Kathryn 03 May 2019 (has links)
No description available.

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