ABSTRACT

Difficult Subjects: Insights and Strategies for Teaching about Race, Sexuality and Gender is a collection of essays from scholars across disciplines, institutions, and ranks that offers diverse and multi-faceted approaches to teaching about subjects that prove both challenging and often uncomfortable for both the professor and the student. It encourages college educators to engage in forms of practice that do not pretend that teachers and students are unaffected by world events and incidents that highlight social inequalities. Readers will find the collected essays useful for identifying new approaches to taking on the “difficult subjects” of race, gender, and sexuality. The book will also serve as inspiration for academics who believe that their area of study does not allow for such pedagogical inquiries to also teach in ways that address difficult subjects. Contributors to this volume span a range of disciplines from criminal justice to gender studies to organic chemistry, and demonstrate the productive possibilities that can emerge in college classrooms when faculty consider “identity” as constitutive of rather than divorced from their academic disciplines.Discussions of race, gender, and sexuality are always hot-button issues in the college classroom, whether they emerge in response to a national event or tragedy or constitute the content of the class over a semester-long term. Even seasoned professors who specialize in these areas find it difficult to talk about identity politics in a room full of students. And many professors for whom issues of racial, and sexual identity is not a primary concern find it even more challenging to raise these issues with students. Offering reflections and practical guidance, the book accounts for a range of challenges facing college educators, and encourages faculty to teach with courage and conviction, especially when it feels as though the world around us is crashing down upon our students and ourselves.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

When the Shit Hits the Fan, Do We Throw Out the Lesson Plan?

part One|96 pages

(Dis)comfort, Fragility, and the Intersections of Identity

chapter 2|19 pages

When Racially Just Teaching becomes Your Own Heart

Pedagogical Strategies for Teaching Whiteness

chapter 3|18 pages

Addressing Incivility in the Classroom

Effective Strategies for Faculty at the Margins

chapter 4|20 pages

Whiteness Matters

Tourism, Customer Service, and the Neoliberal University

chapter 5|19 pages

Black Lives, Black Women, and the Academy

“Doing” Equity and Inclusion Work at PWIs

part Two|82 pages

Embracing Embodiment and Emotion as Pedagogical Praxis

chapter 6|16 pages

Feeling Our Way to Knowing

Decolonizing the American Studies Classroom

chapter 7|16 pages

Feeling Black and Blue in Preservice Teacher Education

Encountering Emotion and Embodiment in Antiracist Teaching

chapter 8|13 pages

Transformational Pedagogies of The Abject Body

An Argument for Radical Fat Pedagogies

chapter 9|20 pages

“The Least We Can Do”

Gender-Affirming Pedagogy Starting on Day One

chapter 10|15 pages

Creating Inclusive Classrooms

Toward Collective and Diverse Intersectional Success

part Three|77 pages

Radical Pedagogy in “Neutral” Places

chapter 14|18 pages

Uncomfortable Learning

Teaching Race Through Discomfort in Higher Education

chapter |3 pages

In Closing

Difficult Subjects for Difficult Times