Source: Teaching Education, Volume 22, Issue 3, 2011, pages 303-324.
Set in the context of a teacher education program, this study examined how three White pre-service teachers participate in book club discussions of children’s literature.
The authors addressed to the following research questions:
When White pre-service teachers are in a context that enables talk about race, racism and anti-racism, what do they talk about?
What conceptual and discursive tools do they use?
The analysis illustrates that the participants held two questions, what constitutes racism and what makes a person a White ally, without firm resolution in the form and function of their talk. Their discourses illustrate that racial literacy involves what teachers say and also a willingness to stand in the space of indeterminacy, which may create space for new social positions.
The authors argue for a continued theorization of critical discourse analysis alongside of racial literacy and multicultural discourses.
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