The Mis-Education of the Negro - Carter G. Woodson - Books - Penguin Books Ltd - 9780143137467 - August 1, 2023
In case cover and title do not match, the title is correct

The Mis-Education of the Negro

Carter G. Woodson

Price
$ 16.49

Ordered from remote warehouse

Expected delivery Nov 22 - Dec 3
Christmas presents can be returned until 31 January
Add to your iMusic wish list

Also available as:

The Mis-Education of the Negro

The most influential work by the father of Black history, reflecting the long-standing tradition of antiracist teaching pioneered by Black educators
 
A Penguin Classic

The Mis-education of the Negro (1933) is Woodsons most popular classic work of Black social criticism, drawing on history, theory, and memoir. As both student and teacher, Woodson witnessed the distortions of Black life in the history and literature taught in schools and universities. He argued that there was a relationship between these distortions and the violence that circumscribed Black life in the material world, declaring, There would be no lynching it if did not start in the schoolroom. Woodsons primary focus was the impact dominant modes of schooling had on Black youth. From Emancipation through the 1930s, white Americans continued to control the institutional and ideological development of Black schools, based on a system of knowledge that reinforced ideas of Black inferiority.


Across the country, Black teachers organized to make their curricula more relevant for students, and they critiqued the studious omission of Black life in formal curricula, anticipating many of the ideas appearing in Mis-education two decades later. Woodson wrote that the overrepresentation of white people and narratives of white achievement in curricula presented an outsize image of whites and their importance in the history of human progress. These distortions had the power to motivate white students to achieve and aspire and demotivate students of races that suffered under the hand of white supremacy. They cultivated an aspiration to whiteness among Black people and/or led them to despise their own race for its supposed lack of achievement. This was a systematic process of mis-education, articulating an aspect of Black Americas experience that scholars before and after Woodson recognized and worked to challenge.


Woodson argued that students, teachers, and leaders needed to be educated in a manner that was accountable to Black experiences and lived realities, both past and present. With current debates over teaching race in U. S. classrooms, the ideas associated with Mis-education continue to resonate today.
 
show more


224 pages

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released August 1, 2023
ISBN13 9780143137467
Publishers Penguin Books Ltd
Pages 224
Dimensions 196 × 129 × 18 mm   ·   178 g
Language English  
Editor Gates, Henry Louis, Jr

Show all

More by Carter G. Woodson

More from this series