Teaching with Tenderness TRANSFORMATIONS: WOMANIST, FEMINIST, AND INDIGENOUS STUDIES Edited by AnaLouise Keating Teaching with Tenderness Toward an Embodied Practice BECKY THOMPSON © 2017 by the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois All rights reserved Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Thompson, Becky, 1959– author. Title: Teaching with tenderness : toward an embodied practice / Becky Thompson. Description: Urbana : University of Illinois Press, 2017. | Series: Transformations: Womanist, feminist, and indigenous studies | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: LCCN 2017001718 (print) | LCCN 2017030025 (ebook) | ISBN 9780252099731 (ebook) | ISBN 9780252041167 (hardback : alk. paper) | ISBN 9780252082702 (paperback : alk. paper) Subjects: LCSH: Teaching—Psychological aspects. | Compassion. | BISAC: Education / Experimental Methods. | Social Science / Gender Studies. | Education / Teaching Methods & Materials / General. Classification: LCC LB1060 (ebook) | LCC LB1060 .T53 2017 (print) | DDC 370.15/34—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017001718 Angela Farmer ~teacher AnaLouise Keating ~nepantlera Ginny Onysko ~sister Contents Series Editor’s Foreword AnaLouise Keating Acknowledgments Introduction 1 Thatched Roof, No Walls 2 Inviting Bodies 3 Creating Rituals 4 Why We Flee 5 To You, I Belong 6 Our Bodies in the World Notes Bibliography Index Series Editor’s Foreword Transformations: Womanist, Feminist, and Indigenous Studies ANALOUISE KEATING What does transformation look like? What is the relationship between scholarship, research, pedagogy, and transformational, progressive social justice work? How can we use words, ideas, theories, class assignments, writing, and reading to provoke change? How can we enact transformation in our daily practices? Transformations: Womanist, Feminist, and Indigenous Studies has its origins in these and related questions. Grounded in the belief that radical progressive change—on individual, collective, national, transnational, and planetary levels—is urgently needed and in fact possible (although not necessarily easy to achieve), this book series offers new venues for transdisciplinary scholarship informed by women-of-colors theories and postoppositional approaches to knowledge production and social change. Books in this series foreground women-of-colors theorizing because these theories offer innovative, though too often overlooked, perspectives on transformation. Women-of-colors theories give us the intellectual grounding and visionary yet pragmatic tools to understand, challenge, and alter the existing frameworks and paradigms that structure (and constrain) our lives. They are riskier, more innovative, and more imaginative … rich with the potential to transform. Take, for example, postoppositionality, an alternative approach to social justice work. Postoppositionality invites us to think differently, to step beyond our conventional rules, to liberate ourselves from the oppositionally based theories and practices we generally employ. Although postoppositionality can take many forms, they all share several traits: belief in people’s interconnectedness with all that exists, acceptance of paradox and contradiction, and the desire to be radically inclusive—to seek and create complex commonalities and broad-based alliances for social change. With its foundation in women-of-colors theories and its desire to produce postoppositional scholarship, praxis, and knowledge, Transformations invites scholars and activist intellectuals to reflect on our conventional practices and develop additional approaches to knowledge production and social change. Goals for this series include the following: • to showcase the transformative contributions women-of-colors scholarship can make in dialogue with mainstream academic disciplines and theories • to provide opportunities for authors to take risks (thematically, theoretically, methodologically, and stylistically) in their work—to build on but move beyond disciplinary- or interdisciplinary-specific academic rules and, through these risks, to invent new (transdisciplinary) perspectives and methods • to develop alternatives to conventional forms of theorizing and academic scholarship, which generally rely on oppositional epistemological and ontological frameworks • to offer opportunities for transformative conversations among the humanities, the social sciences, and other academic fields • to promote scholarship that is highly readable and practical while intellectually sophisticated and conversant with recent developments in the field • to expand what “counts” as women’s, gender, and ethnic studies Becky Thompson’s Teaching with Tenderness offers a beautifully appropriate beginning to this series. Grounded in women-of-colors theories and practices, this book is postoppositional, transdisciplinary, radically inclusive, theoretically innovative, risky, and accessible to read. Thompson’s formal training is in the social sciences, but she draws from her personal experiences, literature, multiracial feminist pedagogy and theory, scholarship on contemplative practices, trauma studies, yoga (defined broadly to include philosophy, teaching, and asana practice), and a wide array of additional scholarship from many disciplines and artists. In so doing, she creates a space where divergent methods, epistemologies, and ontologies mingle and converse, facilitating transformation. This rich, synergistic mixture speaks to the transdisciplinarity this series calls for and aspires to illustrate and enact. Teaching with Tenderness is inclusive in multiple ways—from the academic fields and authors Thompson draws on and the broad audience she addresses (students, university teachers in the humanities and social sciences, K–12 teachers, skeptics, social justice yoga teachers, trauma specialists, and more) to her nuanced multiculturalism, which pays close attention to power dynamics and encompasses ability, gender, health, nationality, race/ethnicity, region, religion, sexuality, and other systems of difference. This inclusive approach—which does not ignore differences among us but instead views them relationally—is a key characteristic of Transformations. Adopting an intimate, accessible voice that is theoretically sophisticated yet not elite, Thompson models an innovative approach to theorizing. (Take a quick look at her table of contents and note the poetic chapter titles.) Her tone is invitational and postoppositional. Making herself vulnerable, she risks the personal. She invites readers into her words; she asks us to work with her, together creating pedagogies of tenderness.
Description: