2022
DOI: 10.1080/1360080x.2022.2051260
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Campus counterspaces: Black and Latinx students’ search for community at historically white universities

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Cited by 13 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…This study also suggests that Black-centered affinity housing is a counter space that engenders positive racial identity in the face of campus racism, akin to Case and Hunter's (2012) conceptualization of narrative identity work. In line with previous research on counter spaces (Keels, 2019;Solo ´rzano et al, 2000), participants noted that the house was a liberatory space in which they felt free to enact and interrogate their racial identities in a space free from the White gaze. For example, they reported a sense of racial pride that was bolstered while inresidence.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 75%
“…This study also suggests that Black-centered affinity housing is a counter space that engenders positive racial identity in the face of campus racism, akin to Case and Hunter's (2012) conceptualization of narrative identity work. In line with previous research on counter spaces (Keels, 2019;Solo ´rzano et al, 2000), participants noted that the house was a liberatory space in which they felt free to enact and interrogate their racial identities in a space free from the White gaze. For example, they reported a sense of racial pride that was bolstered while inresidence.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 75%
“…Hunter et al, 2016). Thus, while physical places and spaces such as Black cultural centers (BCCs), affinity housing, and Black studies courses are important counterspaces (i.e., microcommunities that provide students with essential identity-affirming support that may help their college adjustment; Keels, 2020) for Black college women's experiences of freedom, it is also useful to consider the relationships that Black women build within these settings and amongst one another. Thus, we review research on Black-centered spaces, Black women's friendships, and Black women's self-definition, to situate our study within the broader history of Black women's agentic navigation of PWIs.…”
Section: Charting Black Women's Freedom At Pwis Through Black Feminis...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Black-centered spaces refer to physical spaces on campus where Black women feel comfortable and "free," because the spaces and the people within those spaces positively embrace and welcome them in the fullness of their identities. Within higher education literature, scholars often point to BCCs at PWIs as unique, safe spaces that help shield or offset the harm from Black students' experiences of bias and discrimination within the broader campus community (Hypolite, 2020a;Keels, 2020;Strayhorn, 2018;Tichavakunda, 2021). BCCs offer the physical space for students to establish relationships with supportive staff, faculty, and administrators who can help them develop a stronger sense of belonging to the broader college community (L. D. Patton, 2006), facilitate their engagement on campus as student leaders (Domingue, 2015;Leath, Ball, et al, 2022), and participate in recreation and celebration activities that promote and strengthen their joy on campus (Tichavakunda, 2021).…”
Section: Black-centered Spaces and Black Women's Freedommentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…3. Keels (2020) defines counterspaces as "critical spaces where marginalized students challenge each other to push beyond stereotypical narratives, develop counterstories, and learn adapting strategies from others who are navigating similar struggles" (p. 161). 4.…”
Section: Orcid Idmentioning
confidence: 99%