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Disrupting an Epistemology of White Ignorance through writing a Racial Autobiography

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posted on 2025-09-25, 00:16 authored by Jennifer de SaxeJennifer de Saxe, Alex Ker
White students who enter university having few experiences engaging with race and white supremacy are likely limited in their ability to perceive and understand structural white ignorance and racial bias towards Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC). As a result, these students and their professors tend to gloss over the insidious ways that hegemonic whiteness is upheld within the university setting. Such failure to critically examine structural whiteness misses opportunities to confront an epistemology of white ignorance, the Racial Contract, and their connection to sustained racial domination. Throughout this article, we argue that students can work towards identifying and disrupting white ignorance and hegemonic whiteness within the university setting by critically reflecting upon their own experiences of race and racism through writing a racial autobiography. We use this assignment to illustrate what it might mean for students to ‘become’ co-conspirators within and beyond the university classroom.

History

Preferred citation

de Saxe, J. & Ker, A. (2023). Disrupting an Epistemology of White Ignorance through writing a Racial Autobiography. Critical Education, 14(2), 86-100. https://ices.library.ubc.ca/index.php/criticaled/article/view/186708

Journal title

Critical Education

Volume

14

Issue

2

Publication date

2023-05-02

Pagination

86-100

Publisher

University of British Columbia

Publication status

Published

Contribution type

Article

ISSN

1920-4175