|
In
The Peaceable Classroom, Mary O'Reilley (1993) asks,
"What would it be like to teach from the conviction that
our students are artists, poets, indeed, from the knowledge
that we ourselves are poets?" (p. 87). Throughout the
2002-2003 school year, I have been facilitating a photography
and writing elective course entitled "Sistahs" with
a small group of young women at a charter high school in Philadelphia1.
Starting with the premise that we are all artists and poets,
we have pursued critical engagements with autobiographical
writing and photography both in and out of school. In conceptualizing
our work together, I have been inspired by Lois Weis &
Michelle Fine's (2000) contention that it is in the transgression
of boundaries between schools, communities, and students'
lives where "youths' sense of possibility, imagination,
social critique, outrage, despair, aesthetics, and social
action lie" (p. xii). Within the artistic and reflective
practices we have been engaged in through the literacy and
photography work of this year, recurrent themes of home, neighborhood,
sisterhood, and self-representation have emerged. We have
gathered these themes into the four sections represented above,
which you can enter by clicking on the photographs above.
The
work we have collected here provides only a partial, yet hopefully
suggestive, representation of the young women's artistic and
activist endeavors as poets and artists who, as Sonia Sanchez
writes, "can't let it all go unsaid." Collected
here are works-in-progress. Here are poems written in school
while gathered around an oval-shaped table covered with journals,
photographs, cameras, and photocopies. Here are poems written
after the voices of June Jordan, Lucille Clifton, Sandra Cisneros,
and Ntozake Shange have filled the room. Listen closely and
you will hear these voices in the background, sometimes whispering,
sometimes shouting their connection. Here also are poems written
on scraps of paper on a long bus ride home and poems written
surreptitiously in math class. Here are poems composed in
ten moments of concentration and poems desperate to be shared
immediately and here also are poems painstakingly revised
and worked through over time. Here are works written to and
about the members of the Sistahs community and here are works
created purposefully to make a statement to a larger audience.
Here are writings composed in a flash of brilliance and sometimes
in a cloudy atmosphere of doubt, boredom, confusion. Here
are writings that find their source in the reflection on a
photograph and a collaborative endeavor to make meaning from
each other's images. Here we include images that speak to
us in ways words cannot and that challenge dominant representations
of young women of color. Here we have collected images of
friendship, home, community, culture - images and words collected
not solely for their aesthetic merits, but also for their
personal and political meanings.
As
a collaborative group, we made decisions together about how
to present our work in this on-line journal. Here is how two
of the students in Sistahs, Madonna Delfish and Yasmein James,
describe the work collected here and the choices we made in
the process:
We
would like to share with you the writing and photography
we have created together. We think this work is a reflection
of the things that are left unsaid because of the scarcity
of opportunities that are placed in schools for young, strong
sistahs to find a way. As we do in almost all of our classes,
we will share poetry written by women of color. We will
also share our own poetry that was written in and out of
the classroom. Our individual poems emerged from our past
and present experiences, the problems we face as young females
trying to make our way, and the way we are being represented
in society. We start with a section on sisterhood, since
this is a very important part of Sistahs; it shows how women
have come a long way through writing in terms of expressing
themselves. We also include two sections on our photography
projects - "Where I'm From" and "Self Portraits"
- that we are working on. Finally, we share some reflections
on writing.
The
Sistahs course also serves as the site for my practitioner
inquiry dissertation2.
In my research, I seek to develop and document an educational
arena for young women of color that is collaborative in nature
and that recognizes young women as meaning-makers, image-makers,
and storytellers of their own lives. I am curious about the
possibilities of creating feminist and anti-racist arenas
in schools and I wish to explore how young women - to paraphrase
Paulo Freire (1987) - read, write, and image their worlds.
I am also exploring the nature of the literacy and photographic
practices that occur within a setting designed to provide
opportunities for making explicit and on-going connections
to students' out-of-school lives3.
Perhaps most importantly I am curious about exploring with
the young women how we - as educators, students, activists,
community members - can work toward the creation of educational
spaces that support young urban women in "making a way."4
I would like to extend special thanks to the staff of High
Tech High Philadelphia Charter School, particularly Deborah
Stern and William Walker, for their support of this work.
I would also like to thank Lalitha Vasudevan who devoted her
considerable creative vision and technical knowledge to bringing
the Sistahs' work to this venue.
Click
here for References
Click here for Notes
|