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FEMINIST THEORY/PRACTICE PEDAGOGIES IN A SHIFTING POLITICAL CLIMATE
by Karen W. Tice
In this essay, I discuss some of the possibilities and dilemmas that I
have encountered while developing and teaching an undergraduate women's
studies internship course in activism. I explore, in particular, the difficulties
involved in setting up sites for student placements and projects in a
Border South community that does not offer an extensive range of women's
social change and movement organizations. In addition, I examine how the
current national political climate has reshaped the activist landscape
within which students must work. Although some of them have participated
in social change efforts like anti-sweatshop organizing and civil rights
for gays and lesbians, most of my students work within highly professionalized
and traditionally organized social service agencies. I suggest a variety
of concrete ideas for structuring seminar discussions, choosing readings,
encouraging special action projects, and making writing assignments that
encourage students to interrogate feminist theorizing on professionalization,
privilege, expert knowledge, difference, power, and regional dynamics.
These activities spark critical and active student explorations of internship
sites and experiences. I also focus on the concurrent challenges of encouraging
students to see themselves as legitimate critics of the work done by their
groups or agencies while at the same time responding to their potential
disillusionment over the possibility and pace of making social change
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