Tender Violence in US Schools

ebook Benevolent Whiteness and the Dangers of Heroic White Womanhood · Indigenous and Decolonizing Studies in Education

By Natalee Kēhaulani Bauer

cover image of Tender Violence in US Schools

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Within educational research, the over-disciplining of Black and Indigenous students is most often presented as a problem located within pathologized or misunderstood communities. That is, theories and proposed solutions tend toward those that ask how we can make students of color from particular backgrounds more suited to US educational standards rather than questioning the racist roots of those standards. Tender Violence in US Schools takes as a provocation this "discipline gap," in exploring a thus far unconsidered stance and asking how white women (the majority of US teachers) have historically understood their roles in the disciplining of Black and Indigenous students, and how and why their role has been constructed over time and space in service to institutions of the white settler colonial state.

Tender Violence in US Schools