Description
Book SynopsisAre you interested in working with African-American male students to help them succeed beyond the classroom? If so, this book is for you!
Capoeira is a martial art created by enslaved Africans in Brazil, and it combines self-defense tactics with dance movements, percussion instruments, freedom songs, sacred rituals, acrobatic maneuvers, and communal philosophies. Through this highly-anticipated follow-up book to Critical Race and Education for Black Males: When Pretty Boys Become Men, Vernon C. Lindsay illustrates how Capoeira can serve as a resource to encourage positive self-awareness, leadership, and social justice activism among African-American males. This book represents thirteen years of Dr. Lindsay's experiences in Capoeira and illustrates how a physical education class evolved into an after-school program aligned with a culturally responsive curriculum.
Through research collected at a Chicago elementary school, Capoeira, Black Males, and Social Just
Trade Review
“In this book, Vernon ‘Leão Preto’ Lindsay asks the Capoeira community to expand the roda to influence social justice movements. This is a must-read for Capoeiristas doing work in schools.”—Mestre Acordeon, United Capoeira Association
“Once again, Vernon C. Lindsay has taken bold steps to articulate the physical, mental, and spiritual stamina needed to survive and thrive in uncertain times. His ability to reframe the concept of traditional K-12 physical education for Black youth is noteworthy in a time when physical education is slowly being removed from school curriculum. Such a claim to the necessity of physical education should be considered part and parcel of the process to affirm the humanity of Black youth.”—David Stovall, Professor of Educational Policy Studies and African American Studies, University of Illinois at Chicago
“This book, like the author, is innovative. Vernon C. Lindsay offers Ginga as a creative approach for academicians and practitioners to use in their work with Black males.”—Tony Laing, Director of Men of Color Initiative, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
Table of Contents
Preface—My Capoeira Story – Acknowledgments – Introduction – Ginga, Black Males, and Education – Documenting Black Males to Understand Pedagogy and Potential – From Gym Class to the Community – When Black Males Speak – Resistance, School Culture, and Capoeira – Relevance Without Compromise – Appendix – Index.