Critiquing Racial Literacy: Presenting a Continuum of Racial Literacies

Racial literacy has contributed powerful advances in multiple disciplines about how race and racism are understood. Many education scholars use the concept to refer to antiracist practices and ideologies, a definition that casts some people as either racially literate or illiterate. In this essay th...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Educational Researcher 2022-10, Vol.51 (7), p.481-488
1. Verfasser: Chávez-Moreno, Laura C.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
container_end_page 488
container_issue 7
container_start_page 481
container_title Educational Researcher
container_volume 51
creator Chávez-Moreno, Laura C.
description Racial literacy has contributed powerful advances in multiple disciplines about how race and racism are understood. Many education scholars use the concept to refer to antiracist practices and ideologies, a definition that casts some people as either racially literate or illiterate. In this essay the author draws on examples from education literature to argue that this interdisciplinary conceptual norm hinders scholars’ attempts to reveal the dominance of race-evasiveness, however unintentionally, for two reasons. First, describing people as racially literate or illiterate implies that those who adopt race-evasive or racist ideologies are not interpreting racial ideas, which overlooks that all people who live in a racist society engage in literacy practices that make meaning of race. Second, construing racial literacy strictly as antiracist obscures that making meaning of race can be done through hegemonic ideologies. This accepted conceptualization may stymie useful analyses of hegemonic ideologies that predominate in U.S. society and schools. The author presents a continuum of racial literacies to differentiate between hegemonic and counterhegemonic racial literacies. The continuum’s exposure of hegemonic racial literacies encourages scholars to capture the hidden ideologies in literacy practices that may not exhibit an explicit racial focus but nevertheless perpetuate racism. Furthermore, the author suggests eschewing the labels “racially illiterate” and “racially literate” and instead affirms that people become racially literate through both racist and antiracist literacy practices. Instead of racially illiterate or literate, the author submits consciousness as a more apt term and connects the continuum’s counterhegemonic end to developing critical-racial consciousness, an antiracist lens.
doi_str_mv 10.3102/0013189X221093365
format Article
fullrecord <record><control><sourceid>proquest_cross</sourceid><recordid>TN_cdi_proquest_journals_2735023862</recordid><sourceformat>XML</sourceformat><sourcesystem>PC</sourcesystem><ericid>EJ1355512</ericid><sage_id>10.3102_0013189X221093365</sage_id><sourcerecordid>2735023862</sourcerecordid><originalsourceid>FETCH-LOGICAL-c307t-a65715fc88fb0cc0f273a56a3dccbfa455a6ae360e43468177454f03c3a666443</originalsourceid><addsrcrecordid>eNp1kFFLwzAUhYMoOKc_wAeh4HPnTW6Sdr5JmVMZKKKwt3IXk5GxrVvSPuzf21JRUHy6F853zoHD2CWHEXIQNwAceT6eC8FhjKjVERvwMaq0FefHbNDpaQecsrMYVwCgpMgHbFoEX_t947fL5JWMp3Uy87UNZA63yUuw0W7rTqOkqLqvaTZJ5X6h3sZzduJoHe3F1x2y9_vJW_GQzp6nj8XdLDUIWZ2SVhlXzuS5W4Ax4ESGpDThhzELR1Ip0mRRg5Uodc6zTCrpAA2S1lpKHLLrPncXqn1jY12uqiZs28qyjVIgMNeipXhPmVDFGKwrd8FvKBxKDmW3V_lnr9Zz1Xts8OabnzxxVErxLnPU65GW9qf1_8BP8GhyyA</addsrcrecordid><sourcetype>Aggregation Database</sourcetype><iscdi>true</iscdi><recordtype>article</recordtype><pqid>2735023862</pqid></control><display><type>article</type><title>Critiquing Racial Literacy: Presenting a Continuum of Racial Literacies</title><source>SAGE Journals</source><source>Sociological Abstracts</source><creator>Chávez-Moreno, Laura C.</creator><creatorcontrib>Chávez-Moreno, Laura C.</creatorcontrib><description>Racial literacy has contributed powerful advances in multiple disciplines about how race and racism are understood. Many education scholars use the concept to refer to antiracist practices and ideologies, a definition that casts some people as either racially literate or illiterate. In this essay the author draws on examples from education literature to argue that this interdisciplinary conceptual norm hinders scholars’ attempts to reveal the dominance of race-evasiveness, however unintentionally, for two reasons. First, describing people as racially literate or illiterate implies that those who adopt race-evasive or racist ideologies are not interpreting racial ideas, which overlooks that all people who live in a racist society engage in literacy practices that make meaning of race. Second, construing racial literacy strictly as antiracist obscures that making meaning of race can be done through hegemonic ideologies. This accepted conceptualization may stymie useful analyses of hegemonic ideologies that predominate in U.S. society and schools. The author presents a continuum of racial literacies to differentiate between hegemonic and counterhegemonic racial literacies. The continuum’s exposure of hegemonic racial literacies encourages scholars to capture the hidden ideologies in literacy practices that may not exhibit an explicit racial focus but nevertheless perpetuate racism. Furthermore, the author suggests eschewing the labels “racially illiterate” and “racially literate” and instead affirms that people become racially literate through both racist and antiracist literacy practices. Instead of racially illiterate or literate, the author submits consciousness as a more apt term and connects the continuum’s counterhegemonic end to developing critical-racial consciousness, an antiracist lens.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0013-189X</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1935-102X</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.3102/0013189X221093365</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Los Angeles, CA: SAGE Publications</publisher><subject>Concept formation ; Consciousness ; Critical Theory ; Cultural Influences ; Education ; Educational Researchers ; Hegemony ; Ideology ; Illiteracy ; Knowledge Level ; Literacy ; Race ; Racial Identification ; Racism ; School Role ; Social Justice</subject><ispartof>Educational Researcher, 2022-10, Vol.51 (7), p.481-488</ispartof><rights>2022 The Author(s)</rights><lds50>peer_reviewed</lds50><oa>free_for_read</oa><woscitedreferencessubscribed>false</woscitedreferencessubscribed><citedby>FETCH-LOGICAL-c307t-a65715fc88fb0cc0f273a56a3dccbfa455a6ae360e43468177454f03c3a666443</citedby><cites>FETCH-LOGICAL-c307t-a65715fc88fb0cc0f273a56a3dccbfa455a6ae360e43468177454f03c3a666443</cites><orcidid>0000-0002-6804-4961</orcidid></display><links><openurl>$$Topenurl_article</openurl><openurlfulltext>$$Topenurlfull_article</openurlfulltext><thumbnail>$$Tsyndetics_thumb_exl</thumbnail><linktopdf>$$Uhttps://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.3102/0013189X221093365$$EPDF$$P50$$Gsage$$Hfree_for_read</linktopdf><linktohtml>$$Uhttps://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.3102/0013189X221093365$$EHTML$$P50$$Gsage$$Hfree_for_read</linktohtml><link.rule.ids>313,314,776,780,788,21798,27899,27901,27902,33751,43597,43598</link.rule.ids><backlink>$$Uhttp://eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/detail?accno=EJ1355512$$DView record in ERIC$$Hfree_for_read</backlink></links><search><creatorcontrib>Chávez-Moreno, Laura C.</creatorcontrib><title>Critiquing Racial Literacy: Presenting a Continuum of Racial Literacies</title><title>Educational Researcher</title><description>Racial literacy has contributed powerful advances in multiple disciplines about how race and racism are understood. Many education scholars use the concept to refer to antiracist practices and ideologies, a definition that casts some people as either racially literate or illiterate. In this essay the author draws on examples from education literature to argue that this interdisciplinary conceptual norm hinders scholars’ attempts to reveal the dominance of race-evasiveness, however unintentionally, for two reasons. First, describing people as racially literate or illiterate implies that those who adopt race-evasive or racist ideologies are not interpreting racial ideas, which overlooks that all people who live in a racist society engage in literacy practices that make meaning of race. Second, construing racial literacy strictly as antiracist obscures that making meaning of race can be done through hegemonic ideologies. This accepted conceptualization may stymie useful analyses of hegemonic ideologies that predominate in U.S. society and schools. The author presents a continuum of racial literacies to differentiate between hegemonic and counterhegemonic racial literacies. The continuum’s exposure of hegemonic racial literacies encourages scholars to capture the hidden ideologies in literacy practices that may not exhibit an explicit racial focus but nevertheless perpetuate racism. Furthermore, the author suggests eschewing the labels “racially illiterate” and “racially literate” and instead affirms that people become racially literate through both racist and antiracist literacy practices. Instead of racially illiterate or literate, the author submits consciousness as a more apt term and connects the continuum’s counterhegemonic end to developing critical-racial consciousness, an antiracist lens.</description><subject>Concept formation</subject><subject>Consciousness</subject><subject>Critical Theory</subject><subject>Cultural Influences</subject><subject>Education</subject><subject>Educational Researchers</subject><subject>Hegemony</subject><subject>Ideology</subject><subject>Illiteracy</subject><subject>Knowledge Level</subject><subject>Literacy</subject><subject>Race</subject><subject>Racial Identification</subject><subject>Racism</subject><subject>School Role</subject><subject>Social Justice</subject><issn>0013-189X</issn><issn>1935-102X</issn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>article</rsrctype><creationdate>2022</creationdate><recordtype>article</recordtype><sourceid>AFRWT</sourceid><sourceid>BHHNA</sourceid><recordid>eNp1kFFLwzAUhYMoOKc_wAeh4HPnTW6Sdr5JmVMZKKKwt3IXk5GxrVvSPuzf21JRUHy6F853zoHD2CWHEXIQNwAceT6eC8FhjKjVERvwMaq0FefHbNDpaQecsrMYVwCgpMgHbFoEX_t947fL5JWMp3Uy87UNZA63yUuw0W7rTqOkqLqvaTZJ5X6h3sZzduJoHe3F1x2y9_vJW_GQzp6nj8XdLDUIWZ2SVhlXzuS5W4Ax4ESGpDThhzELR1Ip0mRRg5Uodc6zTCrpAA2S1lpKHLLrPncXqn1jY12uqiZs28qyjVIgMNeipXhPmVDFGKwrd8FvKBxKDmW3V_lnr9Zz1Xts8OabnzxxVErxLnPU65GW9qf1_8BP8GhyyA</recordid><startdate>202210</startdate><enddate>202210</enddate><creator>Chávez-Moreno, Laura C.</creator><general>SAGE Publications</general><general>American Educational Research Association</general><scope>AFRWT</scope><scope>7SW</scope><scope>BJH</scope><scope>BNH</scope><scope>BNI</scope><scope>BNJ</scope><scope>BNO</scope><scope>ERI</scope><scope>PET</scope><scope>REK</scope><scope>WWN</scope><scope>AAYXX</scope><scope>CITATION</scope><scope>7U4</scope><scope>BHHNA</scope><scope>DWI</scope><scope>WZK</scope><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6804-4961</orcidid></search><sort><creationdate>202210</creationdate><title>Critiquing Racial Literacy: Presenting a Continuum of Racial Literacies</title><author>Chávez-Moreno, Laura C.</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c307t-a65715fc88fb0cc0f273a56a3dccbfa455a6ae360e43468177454f03c3a666443</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>articles</rsrctype><prefilter>articles</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2022</creationdate><topic>Concept formation</topic><topic>Consciousness</topic><topic>Critical Theory</topic><topic>Cultural Influences</topic><topic>Education</topic><topic>Educational Researchers</topic><topic>Hegemony</topic><topic>Ideology</topic><topic>Illiteracy</topic><topic>Knowledge Level</topic><topic>Literacy</topic><topic>Race</topic><topic>Racial Identification</topic><topic>Racism</topic><topic>School Role</topic><topic>Social Justice</topic><toplevel>peer_reviewed</toplevel><toplevel>online_resources</toplevel><creatorcontrib>Chávez-Moreno, Laura C.</creatorcontrib><collection>SAGE Open Access</collection><collection>ERIC</collection><collection>ERIC (Ovid)</collection><collection>ERIC</collection><collection>ERIC</collection><collection>ERIC (Legacy Platform)</collection><collection>ERIC( SilverPlatter )</collection><collection>ERIC</collection><collection>ERIC PlusText (Legacy Platform)</collection><collection>Education Resources Information Center (ERIC)</collection><collection>ERIC</collection><collection>CrossRef</collection><collection>Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017)</collection><collection>Sociological Abstracts</collection><collection>Sociological Abstracts</collection><collection>Sociological Abstracts (Ovid)</collection><jtitle>Educational Researcher</jtitle></facets><delivery><delcategory>Remote Search Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>Chávez-Moreno, Laura C.</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><ericid>EJ1355512</ericid><atitle>Critiquing Racial Literacy: Presenting a Continuum of Racial Literacies</atitle><jtitle>Educational Researcher</jtitle><date>2022-10</date><risdate>2022</risdate><volume>51</volume><issue>7</issue><spage>481</spage><epage>488</epage><pages>481-488</pages><issn>0013-189X</issn><eissn>1935-102X</eissn><abstract>Racial literacy has contributed powerful advances in multiple disciplines about how race and racism are understood. Many education scholars use the concept to refer to antiracist practices and ideologies, a definition that casts some people as either racially literate or illiterate. In this essay the author draws on examples from education literature to argue that this interdisciplinary conceptual norm hinders scholars’ attempts to reveal the dominance of race-evasiveness, however unintentionally, for two reasons. First, describing people as racially literate or illiterate implies that those who adopt race-evasive or racist ideologies are not interpreting racial ideas, which overlooks that all people who live in a racist society engage in literacy practices that make meaning of race. Second, construing racial literacy strictly as antiracist obscures that making meaning of race can be done through hegemonic ideologies. This accepted conceptualization may stymie useful analyses of hegemonic ideologies that predominate in U.S. society and schools. The author presents a continuum of racial literacies to differentiate between hegemonic and counterhegemonic racial literacies. The continuum’s exposure of hegemonic racial literacies encourages scholars to capture the hidden ideologies in literacy practices that may not exhibit an explicit racial focus but nevertheless perpetuate racism. Furthermore, the author suggests eschewing the labels “racially illiterate” and “racially literate” and instead affirms that people become racially literate through both racist and antiracist literacy practices. Instead of racially illiterate or literate, the author submits consciousness as a more apt term and connects the continuum’s counterhegemonic end to developing critical-racial consciousness, an antiracist lens.</abstract><cop>Los Angeles, CA</cop><pub>SAGE Publications</pub><doi>10.3102/0013189X221093365</doi><tpages>8</tpages><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6804-4961</orcidid><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
fulltext fulltext
identifier ISSN: 0013-189X
ispartof Educational Researcher, 2022-10, Vol.51 (7), p.481-488
issn 0013-189X
1935-102X
language eng
recordid cdi_proquest_journals_2735023862
source SAGE Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Concept formation
Consciousness
Critical Theory
Cultural Influences
Education
Educational Researchers
Hegemony
Ideology
Illiteracy
Knowledge Level
Literacy
Race
Racial Identification
Racism
School Role
Social Justice
title Critiquing Racial Literacy: Presenting a Continuum of Racial Literacies
url https://sfx.bib-bvb.de/sfx_tum?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&ctx_tim=2025-01-29T07%3A11%3A26IST&url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_ctx_fmt=infofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&rfr_id=info:sid/primo.exlibrisgroup.com:primo3-Article-proquest_cross&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Critiquing%20Racial%20Literacy:%20Presenting%20a%20Continuum%20of%20Racial%20Literacies&rft.jtitle=Educational%20Researcher&rft.au=Ch%C3%A1vez-Moreno,%20Laura%20C.&rft.date=2022-10&rft.volume=51&rft.issue=7&rft.spage=481&rft.epage=488&rft.pages=481-488&rft.issn=0013-189X&rft.eissn=1935-102X&rft_id=info:doi/10.3102/0013189X221093365&rft_dat=%3Cproquest_cross%3E2735023862%3C/proquest_cross%3E%3Curl%3E%3C/url%3E&disable_directlink=true&sfx.directlink=off&sfx.report_link=0&rft_id=info:oai/&rft_pqid=2735023862&rft_id=info:pmid/&rft_ericid=EJ1355512&rft_sage_id=10.3102_0013189X221093365&rfr_iscdi=true