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« Thursday January 26, 2012 »
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Start: 7:00 pm
Thursday, January 26th, 7pm
Zoe Burkholder
Color in the Classroom: How American Schools Taught Race 1900-1954
Between the turn of the twentieth century and the Brown v. Board of Education
decision in 1954, the way that American schools taught about "race"
changed dramatically. This transformation was engineered by the nation's
most prominent anthropologists, including Franz Boas, Ruth Benedict,
and Margaret Mead, during World War II. Inspired by scientific racism in
Nazi Germany, these activist scholars decided that the best way to
fight racial prejudice was to teach what they saw as the truth about
race in the institution that had the power to do the most good-American
schools. Anthropologists created lesson plans, lectures, courses, and
pamphlets designed to revise what they called "the 'race' concept" in
American education. They believed that if teachers presented race in
scientific and egalitarian terms, conveying human diversity as learned
habits of culture rather than innate characteristics, American citizens
would become less racist. Although nearly forgotten today, this
educational reform movement represents an important component of early
civil rights activism that emerged alongside the domestic and global
tensions of wartime.
Drawing on hundreds of first-hand accounts
written by teachers nationwide, Zoe Burkholder traces the influence of
this anthropological activism on the way that teachers understood,
spoke, and taught about race. She explains how and why teachers readily
understood certain theoretical concepts, such as the division of race
into three main categories, while they struggled to make sense of more
complex models of cultural diversity and structural inequality. As they
translated theories into practice, teachers crafted an educational
discourse on race that differed significantly from the definition of
race produced by scientists at mid-century.
Schoolteachers and their approach to race were put into the spotlight with the Brown v. Board of Education
case, but the belief that racially integrated schools would eradicate
racism in the next generation and eliminate the need for discussion of
racial inequality long predated this. Discussions of race in the
classroom were silenced during the early Cold War until a new generation
of antiracist, "multicultural" educators emerged in the 1970s.
Check out this great review from History News Newtork.
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