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We Gotta Work with What We Got: School and Community Factors That Contribute to Educational Resilience Among African American Students

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@ University of Mississippi Libraries

Bradley, Denae

Description

This thesis examines how Black residents in the Mississippi Delta claim and deploy agency and resiliency in a rural community context entrenched in a legacy of oppression. Black, low-income communities are implicitly labeled non-resilient when macro-level community capitals and resiliency literature are applied. However, I find that resiliency is culturally distinctive and oftentimes detected in ritual, daily processes in Black communities. This thesis rejects dominant narratives that Black communities in Mississippi are only poor, backwards, and lacking. It questions the assumption that dominant institutions have created inescapable boundaries for Black people in this region and challenges the notion that the current and past economic exploitations by dominant White elites determine the lives and identities of Black people. The research question for this thesis is straightforwardwhat are Black people doing and saying in their daily lives that counter the cultural deficit language imposed on the Delta region? Through this question, I explore what agency looks like for Black students, and how they re-define resilience through skepticism and frustration. Black students in the Mississippi Delta exercise human agency, defined as pre-existing practices of knowledge that empower collectives and individuals in the pursuit of their goals and values deemed important, through cultural and educational capital enriched by freedom schools and community members (Bourdieu 1984; Sen 1999).The findings consisted of three themes that described the teacher-student encounters in relation to students learning at the freedom project and the local public school. The first narrative, Encounters between the teacher and student, described a latent awareness...
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Created Date:
2019 01 01 T08:00:00 Z
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University of Mississippi Libraries