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Summary
For this episode, I am in conversation with Dr. Ariana Denise Brazier, Diana Gamez, Professor Damien M. Sojoyner, and Luma Hasan; four of the book contributors inThe Promise of Youth Anti-Citizenship: Race and Revolt in Education edited by Drs. Kevin L. Clay and Kevin Lawrence Henry Jr. We explore the concept of anti-citizenship, particularly in relation to youth and their experiences within educational systems. Guests discuss how anti-citizenship serves as a framework for understanding the struggles faced by marginalized communities, particularly for Black, Salvadoran, and Palestinian youth. They highlight the importance of play and community organizing as forms of resistance and survival, and examine the intersections of racial capitalism and citizenship. This conversation delves into the complexities of nation-state development, racial capitalism, and the implications of anti-Blackness in migration dynamics. Guests also explore the fragility of these systems and the role of education in shaping citizenship. Finally, they discuss the importance of collective action and community resilience in the face of systemic oppression, emphasizing the need for a reimagined understanding of citizenship that transcends traditional frameworks.
Takeaways
Anti-citizenship provides a framework for understanding youth experiences.
Play is a vital form of resistance for marginalized youth.
The concept of citizenship is often misleading and exclusionary.
Racial capitalism shapes the experiences of Black youth in education.
Community organizing is essential for creating alternative structures of justice.
The narratives of Salvadoran youth are often criminalized and misunderstood.
Youth are capable of navigating oppressive systems through their own agency.
Education systems often perpetuate violence against marginalized communities.
The historical context of citizenship reveals deep-rooted inequalities.
Healing can occur through naming and contextualizing experiences of oppression.
The fragility of nation-state development is a constant concern.
Racial capitalism intertwines with the logics of race.
Education serves as a critical tool for social order.
Anti-Blackness is foundational to the racial order in cities like Los Angeles.
Migration patterns are influenced by U.S. foreign policy and violence.
Rejecting citizenship's assimilation is vital for marginalized communities.
Educators play a crucial role in challenging oppressive systems.
Collective action is essential for dismantling state power.
Community resilience can thrive outside state structures.
Understanding our collective power is key to liberation.
Sound Bites
"This is a healing journey for me."
"I am forever grateful for the timeliness of it (anti-citizenship framework)."
"Anti-citizenship became a gift."
"They (Black youth) know what's going on."
"They (Black youth) fight their own battles."
"They (Black youth) were able to create these spaces of thriving."
"There is no true participation within the civic."
"Education is tied to the hip with the civic."
"There's no acceptable way to be disruptive."
"We need to be bound in community."
Books and Scholars Referenced in this Episode:
- Militant Education, Liberation Struggle, Consciousness: The PAIGC education in Guinea Bissau 1963-1978 by Sónia Vaz Borges
- Ruth Wilson Gilmore
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