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"Facing You, Facing Me: Race, Class, and Gender among U.C. Berkeley Student Leaders"

Books may be ordered via phone (510) 841-6010, fax (510) 841-0132 or email info@stileshall.org

1 - 19          $12.95 each
20 - 99        $10.95 each
100 & over   $ 8.95 each
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In this book, we hear the honesty with which students express the emotional feelings of learning that are as important as the intellectual learning that goes on in classrooms. Stiles Hall provides a safe place where students can deal with the often-painful experience of letting go of old ideas and assimilating new ones. The book gives hope that colleges and universities will give more than lip service to diversity and train future leaders who can deal with the complexities of an increasingly diverse American society.

Clara Sue Kidwell, Professor and
Director of Native American Studies, University of Oklahoma

Students frequently complain about the segregated nature of campus life, but very few have the opportunity to transcend social barriers and interrogate differences. The students in this volume have had that chance. For a brief moment in their lives, in an intimate setting with fellow students, these individuals have reflected on their social identities and challenged one another about the nature of power and privilege. Their voices are ones of anguish, frustration, pride, and hope. They illustrate how our individual identities are shaped in a dynamic engagement with those of others.

Michael Omi, Professor of Ethnic Studies and
Director of the Institute for the Study of Social Change, U. C. Berkeley

There is disquietude about this book that marks it revolutionary. Clear and sober articulation of the relevance and significance of race on our ethnic, gendered, sexual, and class-oriented lives is uncommon for most Americans and unwelcome. This essential work offers this wisdom: that despite the ignoble social constructions of race, some of us are brave, speaking truth, and are successfully navigating our way through wholeness."

Tracy L. Robinson, Professor of Education, North Carolina State University
Co-Editor of Souls Looking Back: Stories of Growing Up Black

"I can honestly say that the class was the most powerful and impressionable course I took at Cal. The class commands you to be introspective if you like it or not, calling you to reshape your thinking and attitude about yourself and others."

Lanitra Williams, Fall 1993 Class


 

 

Berkeley Scholars to Cal

 

Cal Corps - Associated Students of the University of California.
Career Center -Services for students, employers, grads, alumni.
Center for Education/Outreach
- Contributions and dontations.
RFL
- Residential and Family Living.

 

Facing You, Facing Me: Race, Class & Gender Among U.C. Berkeley Student Leaders


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Stiles Hall, 2400 Bancroft Way Berkeley, CA 94704
Tel: (510) 841-6010
email info@stileshall.org