"Can't Let it All Go Unsaid": Sistahs Reading, Writing, and Photographing Their Lives
In The Peaceable Classroom, Mary O'Reilley (1993) asks, "What would it be like to teach from the conviction that our students are artists, poets, indeed, from the knowledge that we ourselves are poets?" (p. 87). Throughout the 2002-2003 school year, I have been facilitating a photography and writing elective course entitled "Sistahs" with a small group of young women at a charter high school in Philadelphia1. Starting with the premise that we are all artists and poets, we have pursued critical engagements with autobiographical writing and photography both in and out of school. In conceptualizing our work together, I have been inspired by Lois Weis & Michelle Fine's (2000) contention that it is in the transgression of boundaries between schools, communities, and students' lives where "youths' sense of possibility, imagination, social critique, outrage, despair, aesthetics, and social action lie" (p. xii). Within the artistic and reflective practices we have been engaged in through the literacy and photography work of this year, recurrent themes of home, neighborhood, sisterhood, and self-representation have emerged. We have gathered these themes into the four sections represented above, which you can enter by clicking on the photographs above.
The work we have collected here provides only a partial, yet hopefully suggestive, representation of the young women's artistic and activist endeavors as poets and artists who, as Sonia Sanchez writes, "can't let it all go unsaid." Collected here are works-in-progress. Here are poems written in school while gathered around an oval-shaped table covered with journals, photographs, cameras, and photocopies. Here are poems written after the voices of June Jordan, Lucille Clifton, Sandra Cisneros, and Ntozake Shange have filled the room. Listen closely and you will hear these voices in the background, sometimes whispering, sometimes shouting their connection. Here also are poems written on scraps of paper on a long bus ride home and poems written surreptitiously in math class. Here are poems composed in ten moments of concentration and poems desperate to be shared immediately and here also are poems painstakingly revised and worked through over time. Here are works written to and about the members of the Sistahs community and here are works created purposefully to make a statement to a larger audience. Here are writings composed in a flash of brilliance and sometimes in a cloudy atmosphere of doubt, boredom, confusion. Here are writings that find their source in the reflection on a photograph and a collaborative endeavor to make meaning from each other's images. Here we include images that speak to us in ways words cannot and that challenge dominant representations of young women of color. Here we have collected images of friendship, home, community, culture - images and words collected not solely for their aesthetic merits, but also for their personal and political meanings.
As a collaborative group, we made decisions together about how to present our work in this on-line journal. Here is how two of the students in Sistahs, Madonna Delfish and Yasmein James, describe the work collected here and the choices we made in the process:
We would like to share with you the writing and photography we have created together. We think this work is a reflection of the things that are left unsaid because of the scarcity of opportunities that are placed in schools for young, strong sistahs to find a way. As we do in almost all of our classes, we will share poetry written by women of color. We will also share our own poetry that was written in and out of the classroom. Our individual poems emerged from our past and present experiences, the problems we face as young females trying to make our way, and the way we are being represented in society. We start with a section on sisterhood, since this is a very important part of Sistahs; it shows how women have come a long way through writing in terms of expressing themselves. We also include two sections on our photography projects - "Where I'm From" and "Self Portraits" - that we are working on. Finally, we share some reflections on writing.
The Sistahs course also serves as the site for my practitioner inquiry dissertation2. In my research, I seek to develop and document an educational arena for young women of color that is collaborative in nature and that recognizes young women as meaning-makers, image-makers, and storytellers of their own lives. I am curious about the possibilities of creating feminist and anti-racist arenas in schools and I wish to explore how young women - to paraphrase Paulo Freire (1987) - read, write, and image their worlds. I am also exploring the nature of the literacy and photographic practices that occur within a setting designed to provide opportunities for making explicit and on-going connections to students' out-of-school lives3. Perhaps most importantly I am curious about exploring with the young women how we - as educators, students, activists, community members - can work toward the creation of educational spaces that support young urban women in "making a way."4
I would like to extend special thanks to the staff of High Tech High Philadelphia Charter School, particularly Deborah Stern and William Walker, for their support of this work. I would also like to thank Lalitha Vasudevan who devoted her considerable creative vision and technical knowledge to bringing the Sistahs' work to this venue.
In my practitioner research, I have noticed that the Sistahs' literacy practices - both written and visual - are certainly full of creativity and self-expression. Yet, the more I consider their creative practices and the more we talk about their work in interviews and group discussions, the more I see their literacy practices reflected in Jacqueline Jones Royster's (2000) concept of "literacy as sociopolitical action." Royster develops this theoretical framework to consider the writing of nineteenth-century African American women writers, specifically essayists. She writes:
These women were publicly asserting themselves not only as writers with skills and abilities but also as writers with intellectual, social, and political intent. Their essays offer us prime examples of the will and capacity to use literate resources in order to participate in public arenas, and also of the desire to generate, and not just participate in sociopolitical action…These writers demonstrate that they see language/literacy/rhetoric as action. (pp. 24, 50)
The poems gathered here were written in response to Margaret Walker's poem I Want to Write. In rich and complex ways, these poems suggest the deep social and personal significance of writing in these young women's lives. Here literacy is envisioned as a kind of forum for writing about life, documenting it, exploring it, and perhaps transforming it. Following Royster, I would argue that to share these personal and political writings in the Sistahs community and to share them in the even more public arenas in which we have presented this work can position the young women as authors with "social and political intent." When the students share this kind of writing, their literacy work moves from a private transaction to a more public kind of action. This action often inspires, educates, and affirms other students in Sistahs. In addition, it is also possible that in making this work more public this "literacy as sociopolitical action" may intervene in and challenge the dominant discourses that shape public perceptions of young women of color.
I want to write I want to write about the struggles of being a teenager growing up in a world where you have to scream to be heard I want to write about being heart broken by someone you loved and having them not feeling the same I want to write about wanting to live out our dream and wishing it comes true I want to write about holding on to the past and not being able to see the future Surviving the present I want to write about happiness that lasts forever, and not only in my dreams. I want to write about the pain and stress that I have endured from being me. I just want to write. By Lauren Vaughn (listen) |
I want to write. By Yasmein James (listen) |
Photograph by Madonna Delfish
I want to write
I want to write about the mentally oppressed
and we females who are distressed
I want to write about discrimination
that is blinding our generation, causing us the
youth of tomorrow's future to fall in the line
of demoralizing the we's and us, and the they's and yours
I want to write about the givers of
life, showing the world their strife, to come up
from under dominant figure
I want to write about our liberation
and will, to win this rat race
I want to write
I want to write about life.By Madonna Delfish
Issues of identity - specifically as they relate to race and gender - are consistent themes in the poetry we read, the writings we do, and the photographs we look at in Sistahs. In the Self Portraits project, many of the young women began to deal with complex issues of self-representation and to ask some serious (and sometimes light-hearted) questions about how to represent themselves and how others perceived them. A poem by June Jordan entitled A Short Note to My Very Critical and Well-Beloved Friends and Comrades that we read and wrote about in class suggests a little bit of that struggle and possibility of representation.8
Self Portraits Page: 1, 2
If you could look at me and tell me who I am what is it that would you say? Would you judge me by the color of my skin or push it all away? Would you think of me as just another teen that's confused and lost trying to find her way? Or would you try to look deep within? Before you go through the steps of looking before you think why don't you try to get to know the person who I really am. By Lauren Vaughn (listen) |
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I see a young African American girl wearing long braids like my African ancestors did. By Julia Harden (listen) |
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I look at me and see a girl of so much beauty, style and attitude. By Yasmein James (listen)
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Stand up I say, for your right to be heard, seen and felt for it is up to you to break the barriers that stifle and drown you in the gutters of condemnation
Beat the odds I say for the down pressers will always be there making you tremble in their presence silencing your words like the muting of a movie scene raping you of your rights Face your fears I say because we are already minorities because of our race don't choke, spit them out like the bullets from a gun f*** the critics they are the legal prejudice the one left unseen get up stand up break the SILENCE By Madonna Delfish |
Over the course of the year, we have been working with two themes to guide the writing and photography projects: "Where I'm From" and "Self Portraits." For the "Where I'm From" project, I drew upon Linda Christensen's (2000) exploration of teaching for social justice with high school students documented in her book, Reading, Writing, and Rising Up. The young women in Sistahs first read George Ella Lyon's Where I'm From poem and then read "Where I'm From" poems written by Christensen's students. Then they created their own poems and took photographs under this same theme. The photography component of these projects draws strongly from the work of photographer and educator Wendy Ewald who has engaged children and women worldwide for over 25 years in photographing and writing about their communities, dreams, and lives.7
Where I'm From Page: 1, 2, 3, 4
Where I'm From From 68th Avenue when From my closet where the By Yasmein James (listen)
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The picture itself tells a thousand words By Julia Harden (listen) Julia's reflection
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Chil' look deep into my eyes By Lauren Vaughn (listen)
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The work in Sistahs has been shaped most dramatically by a desire to co-create a writing and photography community premised on cultivating and exploring sisterhood. I have tried to envision and enact our work with writing, photographing, and sharing as central practices oriented toward community-building and political awareness of women's lives rather than toward isolated learning objectives.5 Graduate School, a poem by Ruth Forman that we read in class, suggests the kind of writing and photography community we have been trying to cultivate.6
Over the course of the year, the students have written about and photographed various aspects of sisterhood, reflecting the visions they have for it within the course and within their lives. The writings collected here range from free-writes, to journal entries, to poems.
Sister- Evita, Erica, and Alicia the greatest gifts I have in the world to be able to sit, talk and confide in my girls Sistah- A word usually meaning a Sisterhood-The togetherness of woman By Yasmein James (listen) |
Me and You me and you be rided for each other By Sade Cohen (listen) |
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Me & You: aka Shanté & Sade me and you laugh all the time By Shanté Johnson (listen) |
My dream would be For Sistahs For sisterhood By Madonna Deflish |
Sister, I Love You
Sister, I love you So I tell you to leave I see your pain and how you grieve Sister, I love you Sister, I love you Sister, I love you |
Sister, I love you It's time to make a change. You don't have to sit around and play his same old game. I'm here and around, not trying to Sister, I love you. By Jasmine Miller (listen)
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