ABSTRACT

Can scholars generate knowledge and pedagogies that bolster local and global forms of resistance to U.S. imperialism, racial/gender oppression, and the economic violence of capitalist globalization? This book explores what happens when scholars create active engagements between the academy and communities of resistance. In so doing, it suggests a new direction for antiracist and feminist scholarship, rejecting models of academic radicalism that remain unaccountable to grassroots social movements. The authors explore the community and the academy as interlinked sites of struggle. This book provides models and the opportunity for critical reflection for students and faculty as they struggle to align their commitments to social justice with their roles in the academy. At the same time, they explore the tensions and challenges of engaging in such contested work.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Activist Scholarship and the Neoliberal University after 9/11

part |58 pages

Revealing Complicities, Generating Insurgencies

chapter |19 pages

Challenging Penal Dependency

Activist Scholars and the Antiprison Movement

chapter |18 pages

Native Studies and Critical Pedagogy

Beyond the Academic-Industrial Complex

part |56 pages

Emancipatory Methodologies

chapter |20 pages

“One Unit of the Past”

Action Research Project on Domestic Violence in Japan

chapter |16 pages

Solidarity Work in Transnational Feminism

The Question of Class and Location

part |57 pages

Teaching as Radical Praxis

chapter |18 pages

Transforming Pedagogies

Imagining Internationalist/ Feminist/Antiracist Literacies

chapter |18 pages

Strange Sisters and Odd Fellows

Trans-Activisms as Antiracist Pedagogy

chapter |19 pages

Linking “Book Knowledge” to “Lived Experience”

Incorporating Political Tours of Our Communities into Classrooms

part |37 pages

Living with Contradictions

chapter |19 pages

Solidarity with Palestinian Women

Notes from a Japanese Black U.S. Feminist