1st Edition

Cultivating Epistemic Justice in Music Education Honoring Minoritized Knowers

By Juliet Hess Copyright 2026
306 Pages
by Routledge

306 Pages
by Routledge

306 Pages
by Routledge

Cultivating Epistemic Justice in Music Education helps music educators understand how to support minoritized populations in their capacities as knowers. The book puts forward important considerations for ways to better serve individuals across multiple minoritized identity categories, including racialized, gender-expansive, trans, disabled, neurodivergent, LGBQ+ individuals and groups, and... Read more

Introduction: Cultivating Epistemic Justice in Music Education: Honoring Minoritized Knowers 1 Credibility Excesses and Deficits in Music Education 2 Testimonial Injustice and Music Education 3 Negative Identity Prejudices and Music Education 4 Silencing in Music Education 5 Hermeneutical Injustice in Music Education 6 Epistemic Gaslighting and Music Education 7 Epistemic Exploitation and Hermeneutic Labor in Music Education 8 Conclusion: From Epistemic Oppression to Epistemic Revolution. Glossary

Biography

Juliet Hess is a Professor of Music Education at Michigan State University, USA. She focuses on anti-oppression and justice-oriented work, critical pedagogy, trauma-informed pedagogy, and disability and Mad studies.