Washing Away Brokenness: A Narrative Reflection on Emblems of Black Education

Author/Creator

Author/Creator ORCID

Date

2024

Type of Work

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Program

Citation of Original Publication

Kelly, Kristin. “Washing Away Brokenness: A Narrative Reflection on Emblems of Black Education.” Freedom: A Journal of Research in Africana Studies 1 (June 2024): 73-82. https://bowiestate.edu/academics/colleges/college-of-arts-and-sciences/departments/history-and-government/research/freedom%20-journal-of-research-in-aficana-studies-volume1.pdf#page=84

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Abstract

Objects serve as symbols and emblems that hold stories of family history.This paper uses narrative to investigate the idea and power of emblemsand symbols. It is a socio-historical exploration of a mid-twentieth-century washboard owned by the grandmother of a now 73-year-old Blackmale. Findings in this study unpack socialization stories and reimagineeducational practices of a Black, multi-generational family in the rural American South in the 1950s–1960s by taking a socio-historical approach to understanding family structure, education, and labor. In thispaper, the author argues how Black women, especially Black Grandmothers in the mid-twentieth century, challenged the understanding oflabor and child-rearing and the impact on Black children’s socializationand education.