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OU FIRST-YEAR COMPOSITION WORKSHOP |
"CONFRONTING CLASS IN THE CLASSROOM" bell hooks |
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Confronting
Class in the Classroom THIS IS ALSO AVAILABLE AS A RTF FILE
Class is rarely talked about in the United States; nowhere is there a more intense silence about the reality of class differences than in educational settings. Significantly, class differences are particularly ignored in classrooms. From grade school on, we are all encouraged to cross the threshold of the classroom believing we are entering a democratic space--a free zone where the desire to study and learn makes us all equal. And even if we enter accepting the reality of class differences, most of us still believe knowledge will be meted out in fair and equal proportions. In those rare cases where it is acknowledged that students and professors do not share the same class backgrounds, the underlying assumption is still that we are all equally committed to getting ahead, to moving up the ladder of success to the top. And even though many of us will not make it to the top, the unspoken understanding is that we will land somewhere in the middle, between top and bottom.
Power and hierarchy,
and not teaching and learning, dominated the graduate school I found myself
in. "Knowledge" was one-upmanship, and no one disguised the
fact… The one thing I learned absolutely was the inseparability
of free speech and free thought. I, as well as some of my peers, were
refused the opportunity to speak and sometimes to ask questions deemed
"irrelevent" when the instructors didn't wish to discuss or
respond to them. Students who enter
the academy unwilling to accept without question the assumptions and values
held by privileged classes tend to be silenced, deemed troublemakers.
Conservative discussions
of censorship in contemporary university settings often suggest that the
absence of constructive dialogue, enforced silencing, takes place as a
by-product of progressive efforts to question canonical knowledge, critique
relations of domination, or subvert bourgeois class biases. There is little
or no discussion of the way in which the attitudes and values of those
from materially privileged classes are imposed upon everyone via biased
pedagogical strategies. Reflected in choice of subject matter and the
manner in which ideas are shared, these biases need never be overtly stated.
In his essay Karl Anderson states that silencing in "the most oppressive
aspect of middle-class life. " He maintains: It thrives upon people
keeping their mouths shut, unless they are actually endorsing whatever
powers exist. The free marketplace of "ideas" that is so beloved
of liberals is as much a fantasy as a free marketplace in oil or automobiles;
a more harmful fantasy, because it breeds even more hypocrisy and cynicism.
Just as teachers can control what is said in their classrooms, most also
have ultra-sensitive antennae as to what will be rewarded or punished
that is said outside them. And these antennae control them. Silencing enforced
by bourgeois values is sanctioned in the classroom by everyone. Even those
professors who embrace the tenets of critical pedagogy (many of whom are
white and male) still conduct their classrooms in a manner that only reinforces
bourgeois models of decorum. At the same time, the subject matter taught
in such classes might reflect professorial awareness of intellectual perspectives
that critique domination, that emphasize an understanding of the politics
of difference, of race, class, gender, even though classroom dynamics
remain conventional, business as usual. When the contemporary feminist
movement made its initial presence felt in the academy there was both
an ongoing critique of conventional classroom dynamics and an attempt
to create alternative pedagogical strategies. However, as feminist scholars
endeavored to make Women's Studies a discipline administrators and peers
would respect, there was a shift in perspective. Significantly, feminist
classrooms were the first spaces in the university where I encountered
any attempt to acknowledge class difference. The focus was usually on
the way class differences were structured in the larger society, not on
our class position. Yet the focus on gender privilege in patriarchal society
often meant that there was a recognition of the ways women were economically
disenfranchised, and therefore more likely to be poor or working class.
Often, the feminist classroom was the only place where students (mostly
female) from materially disadvantaged circumstances would speak from that
class positionality, acknowledging both the impact of class on our social
status as well as critiquing the class biases of feminist thought. When I first entered
university settings I felt estranged from this new environment. Like most
of my peers and professors, I initially believed those feelings were there
because of differences in racial and cultural background. However, as
time passed it was more evident that this estrangement was in part a reflection
of class difference. At Stanford, I was often asked by peers and professors
if I was there on scholarship. Underlying this question was the implication
that receiving financial aid "diminished" one in some way. It
was not just this experience that intensified my awareness of class difference,
it was the constant evocation of materially privileged class experience
(usually that of the middle class) as a universal norm that not only set
those of us from working-class backgrounds apart but effectively excluded
those who were not privileged from discussions, from social activities.
To avoid feelings of estrangement, students from working-class backgrounds
could assimilate into the mainstream, change speech patterns, points of
reference, drop any habit that might reveal them to be from a nonmaterially
privileged background. Of course I entered
college hoping that a university degree would enhance my class mobility.
Yet I thought of this solely in economic terms. Early on I did not realize
that class was much more than one’s economic standing, that it determined
values, standpoint, and interests. It was assumed that any student coming
from poor or working class background would willingly surrender all values
and habits of being associated with that background. Those of us from
diverse ethnic/racial backgrounds learned that no aspect of our vernacular
culture could be voiced in elite settings. This was especially the case
with vernacular language or a first language that was not English. To
insist on speaking in any manner that did not conform to privileged class
ideals and mannerisms placed on always in the position of interloper. Demands that individuals from class backgrounds deemed undesirable surrender all vestiges of their past create psychic turmoil. We were encouraged, as many students are today, to betray our class origins. Rewarded if we chose to assimilate, estranged if we chose to maintain those aspects of who we were, some were all too often seen as outsiders. Some of us rebelled by clinging to exaggerated manners and behavior clearly marked as outside the accepted bourgeois norm. During my student years, and now as a professor, I see many students from "undesirable" class backgrounds become unable to complete their studies because the contradictions between the behavior necessary to "make it" in the academy and those that allowed them to be comfortable at home with their families and friends, are just too great. Often, African Americans are among those students I teach from poor and working-class backgrounds who are most vocal about issues of class. They express frustration, anger, and sadness about the tensions and stress their experience trying to conform to acceptable white, middle-class behaviors in university settings while retaining the ability to "deal" at home. Sharing strategies for coping from my own experience, I encourage students to reject the notion that they must choose between experiences. They must believe they can inhabit comfortably two different worlds, but they must make each space one of comfort. They must creatively invent ways to cross borders. They must believe in their capacity to alter the bourgeois settings they enter. All too often, students from nonmaterially privileged backgrounds assume a position of passivity--they behave as victims, as though they can only be acted upon against their will. Ultimately, they end up feeling they can only reject or accept the norms imposed upon them. This either/or often sets them up for disappointment and failure. Those of us in the academy from working-class backgrounds are empowered when we recognize our own agency, our capacity to be active participants in the pedagogical process. This process is not simple or easy: it takes courage to embrace a vision of wholeness of being that does not reinforce the capitalist version that suggests that one must always give something up to gain another. In the introduction to the section of their book titled "Class Mobility and Internalized Conflict," Ryan and Sackrey remind readers that "the academic work process is essentially antagonistic to the working class, and academics for the most part live in a different world of culture, different ways that make it, too, antagonistic to working class life. " Yet those of us from working-class backgrounds cannot allow class antagonism to prevent us from gaining knowledge, degrees and enjoying the aspects of higher education that are fulfilling. Class antagonism can be constructively used, not made to reinforce the notion that students and professors from working-class backgrounds are "outsiders" and "interlopers," but to subvert and challenge the existing structure. When I entered my
first Women's Studies classes at Stanford, white professors talked about
"women " when they were making the experience of materially
privileged white women a norm. It was both a matter of personal and intellectual
integrity for me to challenge this biased assumption. By challenging,
I refused to be complicit in the erasure of black and/or working-class
women of all ethnicities. Personally, that meant I was not able just to
sit in class, grooving on the good feminist vibes--that was a loss. The
gain was that I was honoring the experience of poor and working-class
women in my own family, in that very community that had encouraged and
supported me in my efforts to be better educated. Even though my intervention
was not wholeheartedly welcomed, it created a context for critical thinking,
for dialectical exchange. Any attempt on the
part of individual students to critique the bourgeois biases that shape
pedagogical process, particularly as they relate to epistemological perspectives
(the points from which information is shared) will, in most cases, no
doubt, be viewed as negative and disruptive. Given the presumed radical
or liberal nature of early feminist classrooms, it was shocking to me
to find those settings were also often closed to different ways of thinking.
While it was acceptable to critique patriarchy in that context, it was
not acceptable to confront issues of class, especially in ways that were
not simply about the evocation of guilt. In general, despite their participation
in different disciplines and the diversity of class backgrounds, African
American scholars and other nonwhite professors have been no more willing
to confront issues of class. Even when it became more acceptable to give
at least lip service to the recognition of race, gender, and class, most
professors and students just did not feel they were able to address class
in anything more than a simplistic way. Certainly, the primary area where
there was the possibility of meaningful critique and change was in relation
to biased scholarship, work that used the experiences and thoughts of
materially privileged people as normative. In recent years,
growing awareness of class differences in progressive academic circles
has meant that students and professors committed to critical and feminist
pedagogy have the opportunity to make spaces in the academy where class
can receive attention. Yet there can be no intervention that challenges
the status quo if we are not willing to interrogate the way our presentation
of self as well as our pedagogic process is often shaped by middle-class
norms. My awareness of class has been continually reinforced by my efforts
to remain close to loved ones who remain in materially underprivileged
class positions. This has helped me to employ pedagogical strategies that
create ruptures in the established order, that promote modes of learning
which challenge bourgeois hegemony. One such strategy
has been the emphasis on creating in classrooms learning communities where
everyone's voice can be heard, their presence recognized and valued. In
the section of Strangers in Paradise entitled "Balancing Class Locations,"
Jane Ellen Wilson shares the way an emphasis on personal voice strengthened
her: Only by coming to
terms with my own past, my own background, and seeing that in the context
of the world at large, have I begun to find my true voice and to understand
that, since it is my own voice, that no pre-cut niche exists for it; that
part of the work to be done is making a place, with others, where my and
our voices, can stand clear of the background noise and voice our concerns
as part of a larger song. When those of us
in the academy who are working class or from working-class backgrounds
share our perspectives, we subvert the tendency to focus only on the thoughts,
attitudes, and experiences of those who are materially privileged. Feminist
and critical pedagogy are two alternative paradigms for teaching which
have really emphasized the issue of coming to voice. That focus emerged
as central, precisely because it was so evident that race, sex, and class
privilege empower some students more than others, granting "authority"
to some voices more than others . A distinction must
be made between a shallow emphasis on coming to voice, which wrongly suggests
there can be some democratization of voice wherein everyone's words will
be given equal time and be seen as equally valuable (often the model applied
in feminist classrooms ), and the more complex recognition of the uniqueness
of each voice and a willingness to create spaces in the classroom where
all voices can be heard because all students are free to speak, knowing
their presence will be recognized and valued. This does not mean that
anything can be said, no matter how irrelevant to classroom subject matter,
and receive attention--or that something meaningful takes place if everyone
has equal time to voice an opinion. In the classes I teach, I have students
write short paragraphs that they read aloud so that we all have a chance
to hear unique perspectives and we are all given an opportunity to pause
and listen to one another. I use the physical experience of hearing, of
listening intently, to each particular voice strengthens our capacity
to learn together. Even though a student may not speak again after this
moment, that student's presence has been acknowledged. Hearing each other's
voices, individual thoughts, and sometimes associating theses voices with
personal experience makes us more acutely aware of each other. That moment
of collective participation and dialogue means that students and professor
respect--and here I invoke the root meaning of the word, "to look
at"--each other, engage in acts of recognition with one another,
and do not just talk to the professor. Sharing experiences and confessional
narratives in the classroom helps establish communal commitment to learning.
These narrative moments usually are the space where the assumption that
we share a common class background and perspective is disrupted. While
students may be open to the idea that they do not all come from a common
class background, they may still expect that the values of materially
privileged groups will be the class's norm. Some students may
feel threatened if awareness of class difference leads to changes in the
classroom. Today's students all dress alike, wearing clothes from stores
such as the Gap and Benetton; this acts to erase the markers of class
difference that older generations of students experienced. Young students
are more eager to deny the impact of class and class differences in our
society. I have found that students from upper- and middle-class backgrounds
are disturbed if heated exchange takes place in the classroom. Many of
them equate loud talk or interruptions with rude and threatening behavior.
Yet those of us from working-class backgrounds may feel that discussion
is deeper and richer if it arouses intense responses. In class, students
are often disturbed if anyone is interrupted while speaking, even though
outside class most of them are not threatened. Few of us are taught to
facilitate heated discussions that may include useful interruptions and
digressions, but it is often the professor who is most invested in maintaining
order in the classroom. Professors cannot empower students to embrace
diversities of experience, standpoint, behavior, or style if our training
has disempowered us, socialized us to cope effectively only with a single
mode of interaction based on middle-class values. Most progressive
professors are more comfortable striving to challenge class biases through
the material studied than they are with interrogating how class biases
shape conduct in the classroom and transforming their pedagogical process.
When I entered my first classroom as a college professor and a feminist,
I was deeply afraid of using authority in a way that would perpetuate
class elitism and other forms of domination. Fearful that I might abuse
power, I falsely pretended that no power difference existed between students
and myself. That was a mistake. Yet it was only as I began to interrogate
my fear of "power"--the way that fear was related to my own
class background where I had so often seen those with class power coerce,
abuse, and dominate those without--that I began to understand that power
was not itself negative. It depended what one did with it. It was up to
me to create ways within my professional power constructively, precisely
because I was teaching in institutional structures that affirm it is fine
to use power to reinforce and maintain coercive hierarchies. Sometimes students
who want professors to grapple with class differences often simply desire
that individuals from less materially privileged backgrounds be given
center stage so that an inversion of hierarchical structures takes place,
not a disruption. One semester, a number of black female students from
working-class backgrounds attended a course I taught on African American
Women Writers. They arrived hoping I would use my professorial power to
de-center the voices of privileged white students in non-constructive
ways so that those students would experience what it is like to be an
outsider. Some of these black students rigidly resisted attempts to involve
the others in an engaged pedagogy where space is created for everyone
. Many of the black students feared that learning new terminology or new
perspectives would alienate them from familiar social relations. Since
these fears are rarely addressed as part of progressive pedagogical process,
students caught in the grip of such anxiety often sit in classes feeling
hostile, estranged, refusing to participate. I often face students who
think that in my classes they will "naturally" not feel estranged
and that part of this feeling of comfort, or being "at home,"
is that they will not have to work as hard as they do in other classes.
These students are not expecting to find alternative pedagogy in my classes
but merely "rest" from the negative tensions they may feel in
the majority of other courses. It is my job to address these tensions.
Any professor who
commits to engaged pedagogy recognizes the importance of constructively
confronting issues of class. That means welcoming the opportunity to alter
our classroom practices creatively, so that the democratic ideal of education
for everyone can be realized.
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