DiscoverYou Ain’t Imagining This!Literacy Beyond Whiteness: Reading as Resistance, Storytelling as Power
Literacy Beyond Whiteness: Reading as Resistance, Storytelling as Power

Literacy Beyond Whiteness: Reading as Resistance, Storytelling as Power

Update: 2025-03-28
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Black people have always valued knowledge—through books, through songs, through music, and even through memory. In this fireside reflection, Ama-Robin explores why reading has always been a form of resistance and an expression of joy, why storytelling matters, the importance of music, drumming, dance, and other forms of communication and repositories of knowledge.  Most importantly, she discusses how we can reclaim literacy without centering whiteness.

In this powerful fireside chat, Ama-Robin reflects on the deep connection between Black identity and literacy—from surviving enslavement to resisting erasure in today’s classrooms.

✨ Featuring reflections on:

  • Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison

  • The People Could Fly by Virginia Hamilton

  • The Miseducation of the Negro by Carter G. Woodson

  • “Grandma’s Hands” by Bill Withers

  • Ancient African knowledge systems, oral traditions, and storytelling

  • The continued power of Black bookstores and community wisdom

🎧 Topics include:

  • Why Black literacy is liberation

  • Why storytelling has always been a valid, powerful form of knowledge

  • How we preserve memory in books, music, rhythm, and ritual

  • How we can reclaim literacy without centering whiteness

📍 Recorded in honor of our beloved ancestors—and Doug Lofton, whose spirit lives in every story shared.

🖤 Stay curious. Stay rooted. Stay free.

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Literacy Beyond Whiteness: Reading as Resistance, Storytelling as Power

Literacy Beyond Whiteness: Reading as Resistance, Storytelling as Power

Ama-Robin