User:Mimimccammon6/Critical Race Theory/Bibliography


 * Bibliography

This is where you will compile the bibliography for your Wikipedia assignment. Add the name and/or notes about what each source covers, then use the "Cite" button to generate the citation for that source.

As of 11/4/2022

Delgado, Richard (2010–2011). "Rodrigo's Reconsideration: Intersectionality and the Future of Critical Race Theory".


 * This is an academic/law journal, so it should be a reliable source. It covers three different aspects of Critical Race Theory (CTR), such as intersectionality, and might provide more information to expand on the intersectionality/intersectional theory.

Gillborn, David (2015-03). "Intersectionality, Critical Race Theory, and the Primacy of Racism: Race, Class, Gender, and Disability in Education".


 * This is a research article, so it might be a reliable source. It covers specifically what intersectionality is in regard to Critical Race Theory (CRT) as well as has some in real-life example

Watkins Liu, Callie (2018-07). "The Anti-oppressive Value of Critical Race Theory and Intersectionality in Social Movement Study".

Crenshaw, Kimberle (1991). "Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence against Women of Color"
 * This is an academic/law journal, so it should be a reliable source. It covers how Critical Race Theory (CRT) and intersectionality are the "core of social movement scholarship and identifies a pattern of erasure and marginalization of vulnerable populations in the award-winning books".


 * This is from an academic journal and is by a leading scholar of CRT. The article talks about identity politics and how intersectionality helps solve that problem. Talks about how race and gender interact with respect to violence.

Annamma, Subini et. al (2018). "Disability Critical Race Theory: Exploring the Intersectional Lineage, Emergence, and Potential Futures of DisCrit in Education"


 * This article explores intersectionality through the lens of disability. From an academic journal

Hobbel, Nikola and Chapman, Thandeka (2009). "Beyond the Sole Category of Race: Using a CRT Intersectional Framework to Map Identity Projects"

Soylu Yalcinkaya N, Estrada-Villalta S and Adams G (2017). "The (Biological or Cultural) Essence of Essentialism: Implications for Policy Support among Dominant and Subordinated Groups".
 * Talks about identity projects, conceptions of identity, and counterstories.


 * Explains essentialism in terms of it's biological and cultural definition and how they differ in how subordinate and dominant groups identify with them.

Harriet Zilliacus, BethAnne Paulsrud & Gunilla Holm (2017) "Essentializing vs. non-essentializing students’ cultural identities: curricular discourses in Finland and Sweden," Journal of Multicultural Discourses


 * Argues that the static definition of essentialism does not accurately define a person's cultural identity, and that essentialist views are harmful in othering and exoticizing people by defining them as the non-majority and causing them to feel inferiority.