Abstract
On May 25, 2020, George Floyd was brutally killed at the hands of the police. Amplified by Donald Trump’s handling of the incident, Floyd’s death caused what some would term as a “racial reckoning”—a reckoning that pervaded different parts of American and even international life. As Floyd was killed during an arrest, the matter of public safety did not escape this reckoning, prompting some to call for the defunding of law enforcement and to question what is truly meant by safety in society. In Safe Space Rhetoric and Race in the Academy: A Reckoning, James Noel contends that national discussions about safety should not be excluded from conversations about safety in academia. Noel examines the presence of safe space rhetoric in academia and illustrates the ways that designating safe spaces can be a panacea for chronic institutional problems groups on campus may face. The book unflinchingly interrogates what it means to be safe in academia in the hope to find a starting place for radical possibility.
Schlagworte
Microagrssions Academia higher education emotional safety racialized space rhetoric safe space rhetoric safety Trigger Warnings Trump gun violence Race Racism content warnings police Safe Space School Safety School Shootings sports violence whiteness- i–xxvi Preface i–xxvi
- 71–94 January 6 71–94
- 95–104 Engerrrllland! 95–104
- 105–114 November in My Soul 105–114
- 115–130 Epilogue 115–130
- 131–140 Afterword 131–140
- 141–150 References 141–150
- 151–154 Index 151–154
- 155–156 About the Author 155–156