THESES
AND DISSERTATIONS
The double-edged sword: a critical race Africology of collaboration between Blacks and Whites in racial equity work.
Abstract 300
This qualitative research study uses in-depth interview data collected from ten Black racial equity workers who collaborate with Whites in doing racial equity work. The data makes evident that the Black participants find these collaborations to be necessary and strategic while at the same time having the potential to undermine their own agency. The study examines this contradiction, discussing several manifestations of it in the lives of these Black racial equity workers. It outlines the importance of Black embodied knowledge to racial equity work and to these collaborations, and outlines an epistemology of unknowing and a politics of humility that these Blacks seek in their white colleagues. The study also outlines the collective and individual strategies used by these Black racial equity workers to navigate and resist the contradictory terrain of their collaborations with Whites in racial equity work.
Author
Title
The double-edged sword: a critical race Africology of collaboration between Blacks and Whites in racial equity work.Subjects
Inter-Racial Collaboration, Racial Equity Work, Whiteness StudiesDocument Type
PhD dissertationSource
University of TorontoLanguage
EnglishPublication Date
2009