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Creating Our Better Selves: The Fruits of Katie Cannon’s Womanist Pedagogy
Author(s) -
Karen K. Seat
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the wabash center journal on teaching
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2689-9132
DOI - 10.31046/wabashcenter.v1i1.1586
Subject(s) - conversation , variety (cybernetics) , sociology , white (mutation) , futures contract , construct (python library) , situated , visual arts , media studies , art , computer science , communication , biochemistry , chemistry , artificial intelligence , financial economics , economics , gene , programming language
Katie Geneva Cannon equipped generations of students with analytical tools to reckon with the past and present and to creatively construct previously unimaginable futures. Her body of work teaches us to find new paths as we critically plumb our own historically situated epistemologies and put them in conversation with a variety of traditions. As my teacher, dissertation advisor, and mentor during my graduate studies in religion at Temple University from 1993-2000, Dr. Cannon taught me to examine rigorously my own story in its larger historical and geopolitical contexts, to parse the privileges and perils of pursuing the academic study of religion as a white woman, and to engage deeply with multitudinous ways of knowing. See companion contributions to this Forum written by Edwin David Aponte, Miguel A. De La Torre, Stacey M. Floyd-Thomas, and Angela D. Sims.

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