TY - JOUR
T1 - Black women academics in the United States of America and South Africa deploying principles of Feminist Decoloniality as Care (FEMDAC) to confront experiences with microaggressions
AU - Zerai, Assata
N1 - The FEMDAC project is supported by funding from the Andrew Mellon Foundation (2019–2023) and is led by Principal Investigator (PI) Relebohile Moletsane (University of KwaZulu-Natal), and co-PI Reitumetse O. Mabokela (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign). Some of the questions in this project build from The Racial Microaggressions Survey by Stacy Harwood, Ruby Mendenhall, and Margaret Browne Huntt (2010) and from Zerai et al.’s (2021] Racial and the Racial and Intersectional Microaggressions Survey that were developed at universities in the USA. The author wishes to thank FEMDAC colleagues and sisters: Professor Relebohile Moletsane, John Langalibalele Dube Chair in Rural Education at UKZN; Professor and Vice Provost Reitumetse Mabokela, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC); Prof. Ronelle Carolissen, Stellenbosch University; Dr Saajidha Sader, UKZN; Dr Cynthia Carol Nonhlanhla Mthiyane, Durban University of Technology; Prof. Teresa Y. Neely, University of New Mexico [UNM]; Dr Stephanie McIver, UNM; Ms Minnie Nokuthula Magudulela, UKZN; Ms Elsa Zawedde, UIUC; Ms Brandi Stone, UNM; and Ms Mariann Skahan, UNM–who help to sustain her decolonial Black feminist point of view. Special gratitude is also offered to Ms Mónica Jenrette, the UNM Qualtrics guru. Also, thanks to FEMDAC faculty participants, to whom she dedicates this work! An earlier version of this article was presented at United Nations CSW67 NGO & Sociologists for Women in Society Panel: Feminist Confrontations with Patriarchy in STEM, Education & Community Networks, New York, NY, 17 March 2023.
The FEMDAC project is supported by funding from the Andrew Mellon Foundation (2019–2023) and is led by Principal Investigator (PI) Relebohile Moletsane (University of KwaZulu-Natal), and co-PI Reitumetse O. Mabokela (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign).
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - While several studies detail the experiences of university students with racial and gender harassment, bullying, and microaggressions, few explore these phenomena among Black women faculty members in higher education transnationally. This article makes a novel contribution by examining Black women’s agentic responses to marginalising experiences in higher education. Black women’s extraordinary efforts to succeed in westernised universities built on the subjugation of and from the labour of their ancestors, awareness-raising about their negative experiences, and strategies to change colleagues’ behaviours defy ‘business as usual’ in higher education. Neoliberalism, Gender and Curriculum Transformation in Higher Education is a multi-site project led by Professor Relebohile Moletsane (Moletsane & Mabokela 2019), who partners with Black women to support their academic and scholarly success. This article reviews results of a survey administered to participants to document their experiences and explore the interventions designed by Moletsane’s Feminist Decoloniality as Care (FEMDAC) investigators at universities in South Africa and America. This article describes four ways in which researchers effectively operationalise feminist decoloniality as care, by: 1) truth-telling about the impact of neoliberal institutions on the daily lives of Black women academics; 2) locating the source of academic woundedness not solely in the individual behaviours of bad actors but in systemic oppression; 3) creating opportunities for women to see the similarities in their experiences transnationally and to recognise ways in which institutional structures marginalise them; and 4) mutual support, a team mentoring approach, and reproducing Black excellence.
AB - While several studies detail the experiences of university students with racial and gender harassment, bullying, and microaggressions, few explore these phenomena among Black women faculty members in higher education transnationally. This article makes a novel contribution by examining Black women’s agentic responses to marginalising experiences in higher education. Black women’s extraordinary efforts to succeed in westernised universities built on the subjugation of and from the labour of their ancestors, awareness-raising about their negative experiences, and strategies to change colleagues’ behaviours defy ‘business as usual’ in higher education. Neoliberalism, Gender and Curriculum Transformation in Higher Education is a multi-site project led by Professor Relebohile Moletsane (Moletsane & Mabokela 2019), who partners with Black women to support their academic and scholarly success. This article reviews results of a survey administered to participants to document their experiences and explore the interventions designed by Moletsane’s Feminist Decoloniality as Care (FEMDAC) investigators at universities in South Africa and America. This article describes four ways in which researchers effectively operationalise feminist decoloniality as care, by: 1) truth-telling about the impact of neoliberal institutions on the daily lives of Black women academics; 2) locating the source of academic woundedness not solely in the individual behaviours of bad actors but in systemic oppression; 3) creating opportunities for women to see the similarities in their experiences transnationally and to recognise ways in which institutional structures marginalise them; and 4) mutual support, a team mentoring approach, and reproducing Black excellence.
KW - Black women faculty
KW - South Africa
KW - USA
KW - active bystander
KW - feminist decoloniality
KW - microaggressions
KW - transnational collaborations in higher education
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85164502451&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85164502451&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/10130950.2023.2225950
DO - 10.1080/10130950.2023.2225950
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85164502451
SN - 1013-0950
VL - 37
SP - 57
EP - 73
JO - Agenda
JF - Agenda
IS - 2
ER -