[PovertyRaceWomen 1392] Re: List name
Andrea Wilder
andreawilder at comcast.net
Sat Oct 27 22:31:05 EDT 2007
Hi Daphne--
I would stay with the name we have now, but put race in quotes: "race."
THANK YOU MEV! for defining and explaining "praxis." Good to hear
your voice, again.
Andrea
On Oct 27, 2007, at 10:30 AM, WE LEARN wrote:
> Hi all
> I'm only now catching up on the 200+ some messages I had unread from
> this listserv. I'm usually more up-to-date -- but it's been a wildly
> busy 2 months...
>
> Anyway, if it's not too late....I like to recommend that we call this
> list "Praxis for Literacies."
>
> As defined in "Breaking Free," edited by Pepi Leistyna, et.al.:
> "Praxis is the relationship between theoretical understanding and
> critique of society (that is, its historical, ideological,
> sociopolitical, and economic influences and structures) and action
> that seeks to transform individuals and their environment....[it is] a
> dialectical movement that goes from action to reflection and from
> reflection upon action to a new action." (p. 342)
>
> Many of us will recognize this from its Freirean roots -- and will
> understand it in a context of seeking to use literacy/education to
> transform the inequities and injustices that exist in our programs,
> communities, regions, countries. In this way, we can discuss the
> intersections of our diversities. And, for many of us, praxis implies
> what I believe this list wants to do -- which is to understand how
> both learners and teachers are disadvantaged and marginalized
> by systematized oppressions and privileges. This word does assume a
> certain progressive/deconstructionist stance (for those of you who
> prefer to use that sort of language). For the rest of us, praxis means
> education for social change.
>
> By using a word such as praxis, we can discuss race/ethnicity,
> language/culture, gender/women, class/poverty, age, (dis)ability,
> sexuality, and other diversities without "othering" ourselves or the
> listserv. We can have powerful discussions (like those that have been
> happening) without losing vision. And we can take into consideration
> that these issues are extremely complex and interconnected and cannot
> be encased only in words such as race, class, gender. Literacies means
> that we can understand education in a broader holistic sense, not
> merely in the functionalities of reading, writing, and arithmetic.
>
> And thanks to those who have spoken highly of WE LEARN. The call for
> Proposals for the March 2008 conference is now ready and I will post
> it in a separate email later today. You will see that the theme for
> the upcoming conference extends the discussion already happening on
> this list.
>
> Mev
>
>
>
> Mev Miller, Ed.D., Director
>
> WE LEARN
> Women Expanding: Literacy Education Action Resource Network
> www.litwomen.org/welearn.html
>
> 182 Riverside Ave.
> Cranston, RI 02910
> 401-383-4374
> welearn at litwomen.org
>
>
>
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