Teaching Black Speculative Fiction -

Teaching Black Speculative Fiction

Equity, Justice, and Antiracism
Buch | Hardcover
176 Seiten
2024
Routledge (Verlag)
978-1-032-48896-7 (ISBN)
168,35 inkl. MwSt
This book offers innovative approaches to teaching Black speculative fiction (e.g., science fiction, fantasy, horror) in ways that will inspire middle and high school students to think, talk, and write about issues of equity, justice, and antiracism.
Teaching Black Speculative Fiction: Equity, Justice, and Antiracism edited by KaaVonia Hinton and Karen Michele Chandler offers innovative approaches to teaching Black speculative fiction (e.g., science fiction, fantasy, horror) in ways that will inspire middle and high school students to think, talk, and write about issues of equity, justice, and antiracism. The book highlights texts by seminal authors such as Octavia E. Butler and influential and emerging authors, including Nnedi Okorafor, Kacen Callender, B. B. Alston, Tomi Adeyemi, and Bethany C. Morrow.

Each chapter in Teaching Black Speculative Fiction:



introduces a Black speculative text and its author,
describes how the text engages with issues of equity, justice, and/or antiracism,
explains and describes how one theory or approach helps elucidate the key text’s concern with equity, justice, and/or antiracism, and
offers engaging teaching activities that encourage students to read the focal text; that facilitate exploration of the text and a theoretical lens or critical approach; and that guide students to consider ways to extend the focus on equity, justice, and/or antiracism to action in their own lives and communities.

KaaVonia Hinton is a professor in the Teaching & Learning Department at Old Dominion University and the author of many articles and books about literature for youth. She is also the co-editor, with Lucy E. Bailey, of the book series, Research in Life Writing and Education (Information Age Publishing). Karen Michele Chandler is an associate professor of English at the University of Louisville and the author of many articles on African American, American, and youth literature. She is the co-editor, with Michelle H. Martin, of a special issue of International Research in Children’s Literature on Black spaces. Her book, Tending to the Past: Selfhood and Culture in Children’s Narratives about Slavery and Freedom, is forthcoming in 2024.

Acknowledgments

Black Speculative Fiction as “Anchor, Compass, and Sail”

KaaVonia Hinton and Karen Michele Chandler

1. Exploring the Complexities of Environmental Disaster, Justice, and Racism in Ninth Ward

Julianna Lopez Kershen

2. The Responsibility to Remember: India Hill Brown’s The Forgotten Girl

Saba Khan Vlach

3. Reading and Engaging with Kacen Callender’s Moonflower through Intersectional Pedagogies

Meghna Prabir

4. Illusions of Identity: Counternarratives in B. B. Alston’s Amari and the Night Brothers

Jessica Gottbrath

5. The Power of Voice and Choice: Examining Blackness, Black Girlhood, and Identity in A Song Below Water

Christian M. Hines and Jenell Igeleke Penn

6. Creative Disruptions: Protest Art and Alaya Dawn Johnson’s The Summer Prince

Amanda M. Greenwell

7. Resilience, Resistance, and Healing in Tomi Adeyemi’s Children of Blood and Bone

Danielle Kubasko Sullivan

8. Teaching Counterstorytelling in High School using Tomi Adeyemi’s Children of Blood and Bone

Tabitha Lowery

9. Using a Historical Lens to Examine Agency in Mother of the Sea

Tiffany A. Flowers

10. The Monster or the (Wo)Man in Victor LaValle’s Destroyer

Jasmine H. Wade

11. Race in the Zombie Apocalypse: Teaching Justina Ireland’s Dread Nation

Michael Patrick Hart

12. Nnedi Okorafor’s Lagoon: Classroom Projects from an Animal Rights Perspective

Rosa Maria Moreno-Redondo

13. “Slavery Was a Long Slow Process of Dulling”: Octavia Butler’s Kindred as a Medium for Teaching Empathy, Social Justice, and Antiracism

Colin Enriquez

14. Slavery was a choice?: Lessons from Kindred by Octavia Butler

Mercy Agyepong

15. “I Serve the Spirits and I Heal the Living”: Communities of Care as Sites of Resistance in Hopkinson’s Brown Girl in the Ring

Justin Cosner

16. Understanding by Design with Nalo Hopkinson’s Midnight Robber

Toni S. Stevens

Resources

Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Zusatzinfo 7 Tables, black and white; 3 Line drawings, black and white; 2 Halftones, black and white; 5 Illustrations, black and white
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Maße 152 x 229 mm
Gewicht 399 g
Themenwelt Kinder- / Jugendbuch Sachbücher Religion / Philosophie / Psychologie
Schulbuch / Wörterbuch
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Sprachwissenschaft
Sozialwissenschaften Pädagogik Schulpädagogik / Grundschule
ISBN-10 1-032-48896-4 / 1032488964
ISBN-13 978-1-032-48896-7 / 9781032488967
Zustand Neuware
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