The Queer Temporalities of (Im)Possible School Futures: Transness, Christian Epistemologies, and Racial Anxiety in a Secondary Classroom

Author:

Schey Ryan1

Affiliation:

1. University of Georgia

Abstract

Drawing on a yearlong ethnography I conducted at a public, urban, comprehensive high school in the midwestern United States, in this article I analyze a classroom instructional conversation about gender and trans identities in a sophomore humanities (grade 10) course that combined English language arts and social studies. In the conversation, youth constructed temporalities (i.e., relationships among pasts, presents, and futures) that were out of sync with the temporalities sanctioned by the school. In doing so, they drew on ideologies about gender, religion, race, sexuality, and class. Yet different youth offered futures that were incommensurate, particularly because they clashed over whether temporalities were rigid, fixed, and unchangeable or fluid, variable, multiple, and thus open to change. Being out of sync signaled possibilities, but not guarantees, of more just futures and suggested a need for literacy educators and researchers to rethink the roles of (un)certainty, (in)stability, and (non)linearity in classroom instruction with respect to sexual and gender diversity. In making this argument, I integrate queer and trans theorizations of temporality and futurity with adolescent queer literacies scholarship, specifically the concept of literacy performances.

Publisher

National Council of Teachers of English

Reference49 articles.

1. Temporality.;Amin;TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly,2014

2. A gay-themed lesson in an ethnic literature curriculum: Tenth graders’ responses to “Dear Anita;Athanases;Harvard Educational Review,1996

3. The pink lesson plan: Addressing the emotional needs of gay and lesbian students in Canadian teacher education programs;Bellini;Journal of LGBT Youth,2012

4. Exploring literacy performances and power dynamics at the Loft: Queer youth reading the world and the word;Blackburn;Research in the Teaching of English,2003

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