4.3 Article

Becoming Shuri: CTE, Racializing Affect, and the Becoming-Technologist

Journal

READING RESEARCH QUARTERLY
Volume 56, Issue 2, Pages 257-271

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/rrq.310

Keywords

Theoretical perspectives; Methodological perspectives; Digital; media literacy; Black Feminist Theories; Critical Theory; Ethnography; Post-structuralism; Socio-cultural; Politics of Literacy; Research methodology; Technology; Literacy Studies; Ethnography; Interviews; Qualitative Research; Critical Analysis; 4-Adolescence; 5-College; university

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The study explores affect and youth of color in career and technical education, examining how reconfiguration of CTE can lead to radical changes in racializing experiences with technology. The authors emphasize the impact of spatial arrangements on bodily movements, theorizing affect through the character of Shuri in the movie Black Panther. Their creative methodology aims to shed light on the understudied educational context of CTE and reimagine race, gender, and difference in relation to technology and literacy learning.
Racializing affect draws on Black feminist theories to extend affect theory and related poststructuralist approaches within literacy studies. The authors examined literacies via a study of affect and youth of color in career and technical education (CTE) and the reconfiguration of CTE to enable radical change in the racializing experiences of/with technologies. An information technology classroom and its spatial arrangements, plus the larger CTE school, offered a lens into how material spatial movement (mobility and dislocation) affects bodily movements (rhythm, relationality, intensity, and energy) in a rhizomatic becoming process of reconstituted racializing affect with technology. Interested in the emergent rhythms and living intensities within affect theory, the authors also drew on the movie Black Panther to further theorize affect in relation to the discussion on becoming-technologist through the character of Shuri. This creative rendering provided a different methodological approach to reflect the authors' own intensities as researchers and consumers of popular culture in the analysis. Together, the authors hope to shed light on CTE as an understudied educational context and to reimagine race, gender, and difference in relation to technology and literacy learning.

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