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Scholarship March 29, 2017

An Integrative Analysis Approach to Diversity in the College Classroom

The Wabash Center

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Author
Quellett, Matthew, ed.
Publisher
Jossey-Bass, San Francisco, CA (New Directions for Teaching and Learning, Number 125)
ISBN
9781118027622
Table of Contents
Editor's Notes

Section One: Intersectionality and the Disciplines
ch. 1 The Promises and Challenges of Teaching from an Intersectional Perspective: Core Components and Applied Strategies (Susan R. Jones, Charmaine L. Wijeyesinghe)
ch. 2 The Trouble with Disciplining Disciplines (C. Shaun Longstreet)

Section Two: Collaborating Teaching
ch. 3 The Writers and the Detectives: Cultural Difference, Identify, and Pedagogical Disciplines in an Integrated Classroom (Jennifer DiGrazia, Elizabeth Stassinos)
ch. 4 Using an Intersectional Approach to Deepen Collaborative Teaching (Susan M. Pliner, Jonathan Iuzzini, Cerri A. Banks)

Section Three: Points of Interface
ch. 5 The Intersectional Potential of Queer Theory: An Example from a General Education Course in English (Deborah Carlin)
ch. 6 Teaching "Trans Issues" An Intersectional and Systems-Based Approach (Michel J. Boucher)
ch. 7 Refugees, Veterans, and Continuing Pedagogies of PTSD in Asian American Studies (Shirley Suet-ling Tang, Peter Nien-chu Kiang)

Section Four: Institutional Change
ch. 8 From Difficult Dialogues to Critical Conversations: Intersectionality in Our Teaching and Professional Lives (AnnJanette Alejano-Steele, Maurice Hamington, Lunden MacDonald, Mark Potter, Shaun Schafer, Arlene Sgoutas, Tara Tull)
ch. 9 Re-Seeing Race in a Post-Obama Age: Asian American Studies, Comparative Ethnic Studies, and Intersectional Pedagogies (Cathy J. Schlund-Vials)

Index
College and university instructors continue to seek models that help students to better understand today's complex social relationships. Feminist, Queer, and Ethnic Studies scholars put forward compelling arguments for more integrative understandings of race, class, gender, and sexuality and for centering the experiences of women, people of color, and others traditionally relegated to the margins. Intersectionality is one such approach.

In nine chapters, the contributors to this volume offer an overview of key tenets of intersectionality and explore applications of this model in faculty and instructional development in higher education. Gathered from across the disciplines, they draw upon a range of approaches to social identity formation, different theoretical models, and a complement of lived experiences. When read together, these chapters offer a systemic approach to change in higher education by addressing innovations at course, department, and institutional levels.

Intersectionality does not advocate for a flattening of differences. Instead, it argues for another layer of critical analyses that acknowledge the powerful interplay of the many aspects of social identity to address the rapidly shifting ways in which we talk about and describe identities in society and the complexity of classroom dynamics in the academy today. By illuminating the interconnected nature of systems of oppression, we shine a light on the potential for disrupting the status quo and create stronger alliances for social justice. (From the Publisher)