1st Edition

Towards a Queer and Trans Ethic of Care in Education Beyond the Limitations of White, Cisheteropatriarchal, Colonial Care

By Bishop Owis Copyright 2024
    148 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Synthesizing conversations from across gender and sexuality education, race and settler-colonialism studies, and care work literature, Towards a Queer and Trans Ethic of Care in Education explores how queer and trans teachers of colour understand and practice care. Woven between narratives and scholarly literature, Owis theorizes a unique and radical new way of conceptualizing and practicing care in K-12 educational settings, proposing a "queer and trans ethic of care." This new ethic of care is argued for as both a theory and practice. It aims to challenge the embeddedness of white supremacy and settler-colonialism in K-12 classrooms, while offering a framework that can be applied in personal relationships, teaching and research in communities and higher education. Drawing on a study of participants in the Ontario educational system, Owis examines why care is critical in the community and in practice as an education. They then ask how a queer ethic of care can help us understand what it means to heal, thrive beyond survival, and provide care outside of the matrix of white supremacy and settler-colonialism. These considerations are crucially linked to critical points of intervention in academia, schooling environments and policy at the provincial, federal and global level, demonstrating the need for a radical, systemic overhaul to the way educational institutions practice and understand care. Challenging, educating and offering new ways of thinking about care for and with QTBIPOC communities, it will appeal to scholars and researchers of gender and sexuality studies, race and ethnicity in education, sociology, social work, and diversity and equity in education.

    Introduction. A Crisis of Care  1. Theoretically Informed Frameworks in Gender and Sexuality in Education  1b. Care Vignette: Teacher Education Practicum  2. A Queer and Trans Ethic of Care  2b. Care Vignette: Queer and Trans Ethic of Care in Higher Education  3. Embodying Nuanced Dialectics  3b. Care Vignette: Plenty Collective  4. Turning Towards Justice  4b. Care Vignette: Roots Before Branches  5. Envisioning Community Care and Healing  5b. Care Vignette: Epistemic Injustices  6: Care as our Future

    Biography

    Bishop Owis is an Assistant Professor of Women and Gender Studies at Saint Mary's University in Halifax, Canada.