The Spirit of Our Work
By Cynthia B. Dillard
Foreword by Bettina L. Love
By Cynthia B. Dillard
Foreword by Bettina L. Love
By Cynthia B. Dillard
Foreword by Bettina L. Love
By Cynthia B. Dillard
Foreword by Bettina L. Love
By Cynthia B. Dillard
Foreword by Bettina L. Love
By Cynthia B. Dillard
Foreword by Bettina L. Love
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$14.95
Aug 16, 2022 | ISBN 9780807007310
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$24.95
Nov 16, 2021 | ISBN 9780807013854
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Nov 16, 2021 | ISBN 9780807013878
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Praise
“Dillard has written a remarkable book that will move readers committed to making the United States a more just and inclusive society.”
—Library Journal, Starred Review
“This is a book for Black women and Black educators of any gender, but it should also inspire anyone who seeks to grow in understanding as they love, raise, and teach the next generation.”
—Spirituality & Practice
“The Spirit of Our Work is a balm for the soul for Black women educators. As Dillard talks about the spiritual knowing of Black women, in a society that seeks to silence Black women and has used stereotypical tropes to denigrate Black women’s knowledge, a theorization of endarkened feminist epistemology is essential. It gives words for me to trust myself, my critiques of the current education system, and my ancestral knowledge.”
—Cierra Kaler-Jones, Rethinking Schools
“Dillard wants us, especially Black women readers, to engage in personal growth that potentially leads to transformational change in hopes of disrupting societal assumptions and biases regarding Black women.”
—Christina Wright Fields and Elisabet Guerrero Hernandez, Teachers College Record
“With breathtaking prose, Cynthia Dillard has written a love letter to Black women teachers. The Spirit of Our Work beautifully anchors itself in the dynamism, creativity, and magic of Black women and girls. For all who teach and for all who learn, this book offers a brilliant roadmap for creating learning spaces in which we welcome and celebrate the fullness of our shared and expansive humanity.”
—Treva B. Lindsey, author of Colored No More: Reinventing Black Womanhood in Washington, D.C.
“Dr. Cynthia Dillard has given us all a precious gift in this book, The Spirit of Our Work: Black Women Teachers (Re)member. No matter what your race is, hold this book in your hands with anticipation. Soak up, pause, and reflect as you read each page and prepare to act upon what you learn. Dr. Dillard has shared a road map for how we can transform education through uplifting the lineage and power of Blackness, Black women teachers, and the sacred educational road to Black freedoms. In doing so, Dr. Dillard teaches us that to develop liberatory educational environments where Black women educators can (re)claim and (re)member their inherent freedom means nothing less than liberation for us all.”
—Anneliese Singh, author of The Racial Healing Handbook: Practical Activities to Help You Challenge Privilege, Confront Systemic Racism, and Engage in Collective Healing
“(Re)member, (re)imagine, (re)claim, and (re)center! That is, fundamentally, the purpose of The Spirit of Our Work: Black Women Teachers (Re)member. Cynthia Dillard beckons us to love, honor, and listen to Black women teachers who have always led and will always lead us to liberation and freedom. The very spirit of Black women are manifestations of Africa and the spirit of our ancestors. Let these serve as daily reminders for Black women to live fully as we move closer to freedom. What a powerful testament!”
—Valerie Kinloch, Renée and Richard Goldman Dean and professor, School of Education, University of Pittsburgh, and author of Harlem on Our Minds
“With poetic eloquence and intellectual brilliance, this exploration of the Ghana Study Abroad in Education program as a space for inquiry offers a unique genre of educational research from the vantage point of Black women’s scholarship, spirituality, and practice. The Spirit of Our Work (re)presents both old and new understanding of Blackness with conceptual clarity regarding universally human themes. Dr. Dillard calls us back to Africa—to memories of our future that affirm a role for Black identity and culture in the education of Black teachers but also for the benefit of everyone’s shared humanity.”
—Dr. Joyce E. King, Benjamin E. Mays Endowed Chair for Urban Teaching, Learning and Leadership and professor, Georgia State University
Table Of Contents
Foreword
Bettina L. Love
INTRODUCTION
For Those Who Chose to Survive: Our Promise to (Re)member the Ancestors
CHAPTER 1
My Spirit (Re)members Me Whole: The Importance of Black Women’s Knowing, Memory, and Spirituality
CHAPTER 2
“I Was Missing Something, Something So Important”: (Re)searching
CHAPTER 3
The Evidence of Things Unseen: (Re)visioning
CHAPTER 4
A Change of Mind and Heart: (Re)cognizing
CHAPTER 5
The Truth Will Set Us Free: (Re)presenting
CHAPTER 6
The Invitation, Sanctuary, and Living Legacy: (Re)claiming
CHAPTER 7
(Re)membering Is Not Optional: A Love Letter to Those Who Teach
Afterword
Gholdy Muhammad
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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