Disrupting Discipline of Black Women in Higher Education from a Black Feminist Perspective of Foucauldian Discipline
22 Pages
Open Access
Journal:
PHILOSOPHY AND THEORY IN HIGHER EDUCATION
Volume 6
Issue 1
Publication Year 2024
pp. 53 - 74
Summary
The goal of our article is to explore how Michel Foucault and Patricia Hill Collins scholarly contributions work together to understand Black women’s experiences in the academy more deeply. Our qualitative and theoretical project was focused on 1) how the processes of surveillance, regulation, and discipline affect Black women, 2) how these processes reinforce white norms, and 3) how these processes exclude Black women from the university’s discourse of normality. While we contend that processes of surveillance, regulation, and discipline are found throughout the university structure, we focused on Black women’s relationships with these processes through their interactions with faculty. Inspired by the stories Black women students shared, we discuss and offer
Details
- Pages
- 22
- DOI
- 10.3726/PTIHE.012024.0053
- Open Access
- CC-BY
- Keywords
- Black Feminist Thought counterstorytelling Foucault higher education.
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