from Part III - Strategies for Inclusion and Retention
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 April 2022
This chapter explores the challenges Black women face in the US academy as outsiders within these institutional spaces. The author situates the discussion in the relevant literature as well as her experiences as a foreign-born Black faculty member in a predominantly White US higher education context. Beyond problem identification, the chapter advances an application of autoethnography as a useful strategy for inviting White women and others of difference into the space of this lived experience. The chapter concludes with a discussion of how the process of engaging in autoethnographic work has the capacity to change us as relational individuals within communities, and the ways in which this work can provoke participants to act to create more equitable and inclusive academic spaces.
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