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Queer and Trans Youth (Not) Knowing: Experiences of Epistemic (In)justice in the Context of an LGBTQ+-Inclusive Secondary Curriculum

Title: Queer and Trans Youth (Not) Knowing: Experiences of Epistemic (In)justice in the Context of an LGBTQ+-Inclusive Secondary Curriculum
Language: English
Authors: Schey, Ryan
Source: English Teaching: Practice and Critique. 2022 21(4):428-442.
Availability: Emerald Publishing Limited. Howard House, Wagon Lane, Bingley, West Yorkshire, BD16 1WA, UK. Tel: +44-1274-777700; Fax: +44-1274-785201; e-mail: emerald@emeraldinsight.com; Web site: http://www.emerald.com/insight
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 15
Publication Date: 2022
Document Type: Journal Articles; Reports - Descriptive
Education Level: High Schools; Secondary Education
Descriptors: LGBTQ People; Social Bias; Social Justice; Inclusion; High School Students; Language Arts; Social Studies; Interdisciplinary Approach; Student Experience; English Instruction; Humanities
DOI: 10.1108/ETPC-04-2022-0054
ISSN: 1175-8708
Abstract: Purpose: Current legislative, policy and cultural efforts to censor and illegalize classroom discussions and curricular representations of LGBTQ+ people reflect longstanding challenges in English education. In an effort to explore what curricular inclusion can (not) accomplish--especially what and how current struggles over inclusion, censorship, illegalization and ultimately representation in English education might (not) contribute to queer and trans liberation--the purpose of this article is to feature the experiences of queer and trans youth as knowers in classroom lessons with LGBTQ+-inclusive curriculum. Design/methodology/approach: Drawing from a yearlong literacy ethnography at a Midwestern high school in which the author explored youth and adults reading, writing and talking about sexual and gender diversity, in this article the author focuses on one literacy learning context at the high school, a co-taught sophomore humanities that combined English language arts and social studies. Findings: Engaging theories of epistemic (in) justice, the findings of this article highlight the experiences of queer and trans youth--especially two queer youth of Color, Camden and Imani--as knowers in the context of an LGBTQ+-inclusive classroom curriculum. The author describes epistemic harms with respect to distortions of credibility and homonormative assimilationist requirements and reflects on alternative possibilities that youth gestured toward through their small resistances. Originality/value: By centering the experiences of LGBTQ+ youth, this article contributes to research about LGBTQ+-inclusive curriculum in English teaching. Previous research, when empirical rather than conceptual, has tended to focus on the perspectives of teachers.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2022
Accession Number: EJ1353749
Database: ERIC