ABSTRACT

Offering an examination of educational approaches to promote justice, this volume demonstrates the necessity for keeping race, ethnicity, class, language, and other diversities at the core of pedagogical strategies and theories that address queer, trans, gender nonbinary and related issues.

Queer theory, trans theory, and intersectional theory have all sought to describe, create, and foster a sense of complex subjectivity and community, insisting on relationality and complexity as concepts and communities shift and change. Each theory has addressed exclusions from dominant practices and encouraged a sense of connection across struggles. This collection brings these crucial theories together to inform pedagogies across a wide array of contexts of formal education and community-based educational settings. Seeking to push at the edges of how we teach and learn across subjectivities and communities, authors in this volume show that theories inform practice and practice informs theory—but this takes careful attention, reflexivity, and commitment.

This scholarly text will be of great interest to graduate and postgraduate students, academics, teachers, libraries and policy makers in the field of Gender and Sexuality in Education, LGBTQ studies, Multicultural Education and Sociology of Education.

chapter |14 pages

Misses and Connections

Queer, Trans, and Intersectional Pedagogies
Edited ByCris Mayo, Mollie V. Blackburn

chapter 1|17 pages

Spaces of Collision

Intersectionalities of Race, Gender Identity, and Generations
ByCindy Cruz, Cris Mayo

section Section I|44 pages

Teachers and Students in Classrooms and Schools

chapter 2|15 pages

Gender Identity Complexity Is Trans-sectional Turn

Expanding the Theory of Trans*+ness into Literacy Practice
Bysj Miller

chapter 3|14 pages

“I Don’t Write So Other People Notice Me, I Write So I Can Notice Myself”

Locating Queer at the Intersection of Rhetoric, Resistance, and Resource-Based Pedagogy
ByJon Wargo

chapter 4|13 pages

Identity Deficits

Reading, Learning, and Teaching Trans and Racial Identities in an Upper Elementary Classroom
ByJill M. Hermann-Wilmarth

section Section II|56 pages

Families and Communities in the Educational Lives of Students

chapter 5|20 pages

OtrasMadres

Latina Immigrants Doing Queer Advocacy Work
ByRigoberto Marquez

chapter 6|21 pages

Queering Family Difference to Dispel the Myth of the “Normal”

Creating Classroom and School Communities that Affirm All Students and their Families
ByNorma A. Marrun, Christine Clark, Omi McCadney

chapter 7|13 pages

Visibility Alone Will Not Save Us

Leveraging Invisibility as a Possibility for Liberatory Pedagogical Practice
ByZ Nicolazzo

section Section III|69 pages

Students and Higher Education Policies

chapter 9|17 pages

After Student Activism

Co-Curricular Engagement in Solidarity and Healing
ByAppy Frykenberg

chapter 10|16 pages

Undoing Cishet White Organizational Theory and Praxis

ByErich N. Pitcher

chapter 11|7 pages

Border Pedagogies and States

Trans, Race, and Recognitions
ByFrancisco J. Galarte