ABSTRACT

College Curriculum at the Crossroads explores the ways in which college curriculum is complicated, informed, understood, resisted, and enriched by women of color. This text challenges the canon of curriculum development which foregrounds the experiences of white people, men and other dominant subject positions. By drawing on Black, Latina, Queer, and Transnational feminism, the text disrupts hegemonic curricular practices in post-secondary education. This collection is relevant to current conversation within higher education, which looks to curriculum to aid in the development of a more tolerant and just citizenry. Women of color have long theorized the failures of injustice and the promise of inclusion; as such, this text rightly positions women of color as true "experts in the field."

Across a variety of approaches, from reflections on personal experience to application of critical scholarship, the authors in this collection explore the potency of women of color’s presence with/in college curriculum and emphasize a dire need for women of color’s voices at the center of the academic process.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Why Curriculum?

chapter |13 pages

Somos Gente Estudiada

Creating Change Within and Outside the Walls of Academia

chapter |23 pages

Academic Sapphires

College Curriculum at the Intersection of Race, Gender, and Black Women’s Subversion

chapter |18 pages

For Women of Color Who Have Considered Critical Social Theories

When the Dominant Narrative Is No Longer Enough

chapter |13 pages

Curriculum as Community-Building, Liberation, Resistance, and Empowerment

Reflections from Fifteen Years of Teaching

chapter |11 pages

De donde tu eres

Pedagogies of a Puerto Rican Academic

chapter |14 pages

Teaching to Transgress

Africana Studies Curriculum as a Support for Black Student Activism