Interactive Phases of Curricular and Personal Re-Vision with Regard to Race. Working Paper No. 219 / Peggy McIntosh.

Most white, middle-class citizens see society from a monocultural perspective, a perspective that assumes, often unconsciously, that persons of all races are in the same cultural system together. This single-system form of seeing the world, is blind to its own cultural specificity. People who see pe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: McIntosh, Peggy
Corporate Author: Wellesley Coll., MA. Center for Research on Women
Language:English
Published: [Place of publication not identified] : Distributed by ERIC Clearinghouse, 1990.
Subjects:
Genre:
Physical Description:21 pages
Format: Microfilm Book
Description
Summary:
Most white, middle-class citizens see society from a monocultural perspective, a perspective that assumes, often unconsciously, that persons of all races are in the same cultural system together. This single-system form of seeing the world, is blind to its own cultural specificity. People who see persons of other races monoculturally cannot imagine the reality that those "others" think of themselves not in relation to the majority race but in terms of their own culturally specific identities. This paper presents an "interactive phase theory" with regard to race that is intended to reassess school curricula in terms of heightened levels of consciousness concerning race. In the context of U.S. history courses, five phases are presented: phase one: all-white history; phase two: exceptional minority individuals in U.S. history; phase three: minority issues, or minority groups as problems, anomalies, absences, or victims in U.S. history; phase four: the lives and cultures of people of color everywhere as history; and phase five: history redefined and reconstructed to include all people. (DB)
Note:Availability: Wellesley College, Center for Research on Women, Wellesley, MA 02181 ($4.00 plus postage).
ERIC Note: For related documents, see edition 244 895 and edition 335 261-262.
Microform.
Call Number:ED336310 Microfiche
Reproduction Note:
Microfiche. [Washington D.C.]: ERIC Clearinghouse microfiches : positive.