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Dr. Bickmore's YA Wednesday's 
Monday Motivators

This blog page hosts posts some Mondays. The intent and purpose of a Monday Motivator is to provide teachers or readers with an idea they can share or an activity they can conduct right away.

The Main Blog Page

The Social History of Place in YA Nonfiction and Lessons in Digital Composition Based on Marc Aronson’s (2021), Four Streets and a Square: A History of Manhattan and the New York Idea by Stacy Graber

9/26/2022

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The Key Idea
Teachers would benefit from mining YA nonfiction for its potential to catalyze engaging and meaningful, researched writing in public history. Books like Aronson’s (2021), Four Streets and a Square: A History of Manhattan and the New York Idea, catalyze such work as they provide a methodological model of the social history of space, in that place markers can be read as complicated sites of conflict and (re)invention. Moreover, nonfiction texts like Four Streets and a Square have the capability to position young people as historians and authors of a new variety of digitally researched writing, as well as arbiters of what these histories of place mean.

Overview and Method

Place always signified something important for me. Growing up in Detroit, I felt ever conscious of places or representational spaces that served as portals of meaning to understand the city at large, like Belle Isle and the Belle Isle Aquarium with its polished brass rails, vitreous, green ceiling tile, cool, dank passageways, and the still silence of the giant gars. City planners intended Belle Isle as a respite and natural encounter, a sanctuary in contrast to the toils of the workweek. Moreover, historians indicate that traces of Frederick Law Olmstead’s vision are imprinted on the design of the park (Detroit Historical Society, 2022).

We might recognize Olmstead’s name as the landscape architect of Central Park, and generalize some of the same forces at work in the creation of that green space as so many others in the nation, in that public parks allegorized social tensions concerning wealth and access made comprehensible through the opposition between those who had always enjoyed the pleasures of a private garden, and others whom city planners believed would benefit from the pedagogy of parks toward cultivating an aesthetic disposition of appreciation (Aronson, 2021, pp. 133-135).

The story of Central Park is one of many that Aronson (2021) relates in Four Streets and a Square, a vibrantly ambitious social history of Manhattan, which also represents a method of research and composition. More specifically, Aronson enables public space to become comprehensible through the location of central tensions that reveal competing identities, social arrangements, and values, and from this conflicted set of encounters emerges a complex portrait of the city. For example, Four Streets and a Square reminds us that the verdant space of contemplative pleasure, Central Park, emerged from the forced removal of “Black and German communities” who made their home in Seneca Village, the park site prior to 1853 (Aronson, 2021, p. 133).

In this rendering of New York cityscape, the reader tracks the emergence of cultural institutions and landmarks, affinities and oppositions, through a succession of clashes: Indigenous dwellers and Dutch traders, immigrants and nativists, reformers and challengers—up to present day disputes between longstanding residents and investment firms.
However, what I have shared thus far only accounts for half of the compositional method. For the material book, Four Streets and a Square, is doubled by a parallel text or digital catalog of thematically related, multimodal sources that enhance and expand the reading experience. Meaning, the reader is cued by signs embedded in the print text to shift to the digital companion. In this way, the reader embarks on a hypertext journey that enables the city—in all its contradiction and fullness—to sensorially materialize. 

For example, the hypertext companion reader (accessible here) is introduced by Tito Puente’s, “110th Street and 5th Avenue,” which initiates readers to the coming catalog: digital texts from historical archives (e.g., Knickerbocker’s History of New York ); wiki (e.g., the Welikia: Beyond Mannahatta, a curated encounter with pre-colonial nature); interactive maps of landmarks reflective of specific social and cultural histories (e.g. Mapping the African American Past and resources from the Cornell library on labor and working class studies); archival photos and illustrations; Smithsonian links to online resources; academic articles and lectures (e.g., Wynton Marsalis’ discussion on the history of minstrelsy); musical selections and reaction videos (e.g., opera, swing, klezmer, folk, and New York Salsa); records on public emergencies and disasters (e.g., the New York Draft Riots of 1863 and burning of the Orphan Asylum); virtual museum tours (e.g., the New York Transit Museum); podcasts (e.g., an episode of NPR’s Code Switch on the history of the “cakewalk”); video and audio recordings of key performances (e.g., samples of Ragtime, Jazz, show tunes, gospel, and rock); constellations of resources on special topics (e.g., the History of Harlem, musical theater, etc.); film clips and historic shorts (e.g., Pennebaker’s Daybreak Express), paintings (e.g., Jacob Lawrence’s Migration Series), and numerous politically and socially resonant conversations (e.g., some topics include Malcolm X, Nina Simone, Lorraine Hansberry, and the Stonewall Project).

All these resources enable—and ultimately model—an evocative journey into place through an initiation to arts, architecture, history, politics, and socio-cultural relationships.

Activity
It would be easy to get overwhelmed by the sheer amount of place-specific detail in the book. However, if the reader keeps certain organizing concepts in view (e.g., political/ideological conflicts, shifting economic and social relationships, cultural-artistic watersheds, and semiotic decoding of public space), then a compositional blueprint emerges as to how the project might be adapted and applied to any space on any scale the reader might choose, contingent on a person’s individual locale.

For example, a student could select a site (e.g., city, building, landmark, monument, natural space, etc.) that would open a window onto public history discoverable by research. And, in the process of that research, specific tensions would emerge as to the location’s divergent meaning or value for varied stakeholders across time, which the student would then interpret and evaluate through commentary.

Students might consider places like 1) formerly restricted areas (e.g., neighborhoods, schools, or social sites), 2) contested places that had a specific meaning for community members at one time and then newcomers proposed other meanings, perhaps with a change in ownership (e.g., stadiums, businesses, factories, or neighborhoods), or 3) monuments and landmarks that act as cartographies of complicated social relationships over time.
But that is not all. Based on the wealth of digital resources I mentioned above, a faithful mirroring of Aronson’s (2021) project would also have to render the subject digitally through an eclectic assemblage of multimodal sources that would present the space in all its paradox for readers to consider. This could occur through curation of a companion constellation of resources outside of the text, akin to Aronson’s (2021) method, or it could happen through the composition of a digital document with embedded hyperlinks.

Text Connections
The scholar and writer, Will Self (2012), composed a multimodal essay titled, “Kafka’s Wound: A Digital Literary Essay,” that incorporated a rich array of resources like we see in Aronson, toward offering a non-linear, oneiric rumination on Franz Kafka’s Prague to contextualize the short story, “A Country Doctor.” Although the document is no longer available on the internet, the essay demonstrated an impressive level of technical skill, artistic ingenuity, and research authority, inaugurated by an animated, weeping willow-like graphic organizer that appeared as a header and device for loosely arranging the hyperlinked materials. This kind of digital composition is texturally reflective of the 21st Century writing forms advocated by numerous scholars of composition pedagogy.

Additionally, although nonfiction social histories of place in YAL are a rarity, there was an Alex Award-winning text by Stephen G. Bloom (2010) titled, The Oxford Project, which took a different approach to presenting a diachronic vision of place. This remarkable book contrasted the photos of residents of Oxford, Iowa across a gulf of 20 years, and offered ethnographic description of place through changes in the portraits and interviews with subjects. This book reads like the nonfiction, multimodal complement to Anderson’s (1919/1992) Winesburg, Ohio.  

Additional Resources
I recommend the following resources for the teacher interested in designing a unit on writing about place.
Augé, M. (2008). Non-places: An introduction to supermodernity (J. Howe, Trans.). Verso.
Bachelard, G. (1994). The poetics of space (J.R. Stilgoe, Trans.). Beacon Press.
Cresswell, T. (2004). Place: A short introduction. Blackwell.
Lefebvre, H. (1992). The production of space (D. Nicholson-Smith, Trans.). Wiley-Blackwell.
Massey, D. & Jess, P. (Eds.). (1996). A Place in the world? Places, cultures, and globalization. Oxford University Press.
Mathieu, P., Grattan, G., Lindgren, T., & Shultz, S. (2013). Writing places (2nd ed.). Pearson.

References
Anderson, S. (1992). Winesburg, Ohio. Penguin.
Aronson, M. (2021). Four streets and a square: A history of Manhattan and the New York idea. Candlewick Press.
Bloom, S.G. (2010). The Oxford project (P. Feldstein, Photog.). Welcome books.
Detroit Historical Society. (2022). Belle Isle Park. Encyclopedia of Detroit. https://detroithistorical.org/learn/encyclopedia-of-detroit/belle-isle-park
Self, W. (2012, August 9). Kafka’s wound: A digital literary essay. The Space [digital arts service].

Stacy Graber is an Associate Professor and Program Coordinator of English Education at Youngstown State University. Her areas of interest include critical theory, pedagogy, young adult literature, and popular culture.
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Planning Ahead: Banned Books Week is September 18-24 by Ritu Radhakrishnan

9/12/2022

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I realize that there is still another week before Banned Books Week. However, I thought today’s Monday Motivator could serve as a charge to all educators, librarians, and people who love books, as we continue to unite against Banned Books. While Banned Books Week is important, I fear that it falls in the same vein as Black History Month or Poetry Month. People, places, and things that are an integral part of society cannot be relegated to a simple unit of time. Respect, learning, and recognition should be a daily practice. While I offer ways to consider integrating books into lessons during Banned Books Week, I do think it’s important that students are engaging with books across the content areas and throughout the day.   

As students  return  to school in Fall 2022, stakeholders are facing the same issue appeared regarding censorship and banned books. In 2021, the American Library Association’s Office for Intellectual Freedom tracked 729 challenges to library, school, and university services in 2021. On August 18, 2022, The Hill reported that a Texas school district removed 41 books from the library, including a graphic novel version of the Diary of Anne Frank and the Bible. Maybe it’s a positive sign that I am still shocked by the censorship of words and thoughts, but the continued assault on these books, on different perspectives and realities of the world, is frightening. 

In June 2022, USA Today (O’Connell-Domench) highlighted the broader implications of this continued assault on books:
  • Tennessee schools removed more than 300 books from the library shelves as state legislators made proposals for banning LGBTQ+ books and books labeled as “Black Lives Matter”.
  • The residents of a small town in western Michigan voted to defund the only community library when librarians refused to remove LGBTQ+-themed books.
  • A community library in a small town in Iowa briefly shut down without a director after a series of resignations and criticism over hiring LGBTQ+ employees and including books that focused on underrepresented communities and perspectives. 
  • More and more librarians are receiving threats and becoming targets. 
  • More and more teachers are receiving threats and becoming targets.  
According to Unite Against Book Bans, 71% of voters oppose efforts to remove books from public libraries, and 67%  of voters oppose efforts to remove books from school libraries. The key word in these phrases are voters. These surveys don’t include most of our K-12 students. I am fairly confident that surveys of K-12 learners raise these numbers considerably. K-12 students want to learn, and they want to see themselves. In anticipation of Banned Books Week, I thought I’d give a head’s up to classroom teachers who may want to highlight banned books in their classrooms.  

Using Banned Books 
While the impetus is to broaden representation of silenced voices through the integration of banned books in our classrooms, I limited myself to books that were challenged during 2021 and provided only the briefest snapshot of ways to incorporate these books. 

English 
Monday’s Not Coming (Tiffany D. Jackson): English teachers,  obviously you can take your pick. I’m choosing Monday’s Not Coming because I was surprised to read that it became a challenge during the 2021-2022 school year. The book was challenged simply because it was written by a Black author. Texas state representative Matt Krause released a list of about 850 books that he claimed "make students feel discomfort" due to their content about race and sexuality during the anti-CRT (Critical Race Theory) movement. Monday’s Not Coming provides English teachers an opportunity to support students’ development of critical media literacy skills. Jackson brings attention to the fact that BIPOC females are often overlooked during media coverage of missing children despite higher rates of missing children among communities of color, (Kaur, 2019), including Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW). 

Math
10,000 Dresses (Marcus Ewert): (Hear me out math teachers… I’m working off of memories of Calculus).  This book is banned for LGBTQ+ themes. In this book, Bailey dreams about magical dresses…10,000 of them. There are dresses made of crystals , flowers, windows… But, Bailey only hears from his parents, “You’re a Boy!” After reading the book, students may use the dress to apply principles of permutations, or simply use Bailey’s story for word problems of various algebraic concepts. Ultimately, it’s about the Banned Book itself. Incorporating 10,000 Dresses in a math class would not only celebrate Bailey and Bailey’s fashion sense, but underscore the importance of representation in all of our content areas. 

Modern Languages 
13 Reasons Why (Jay Asher): With any of the Modern Languages, I think there is also choice built into these lessons. It would be easy to find translated versions of any of the books, and integrate them into a lesson for comprehension and vocabulary. I chose 13 Reasons Why because it is extremely popular with young adult readers already, and because the reasons/tapes themselves lend themselves to opportunities for students to build verbal and communicative proficiency in these languages. Students can discuss the reasons by developing their interpersonal communication skills. While the book is banned because of the fear that it “glamorizes” suicide. I would argue that discussing Hannah’s experiences in a safe school classroom does not glamorize suicide, but offers a connection and opening for discussion for readers who may need it.

Science
Lawn Boy (Jonathan Evison): (A little patience here, too, Science-based teachers). While this book focuses on issues of classism, the main character Mike Muñoz, was a “lawn boy." Mike is a  young Chicano man in Washington State who was just fired as a lawn boy on a landscaping crew. While the focus should be on issues of race and class, the nature of landscaping crews and who employs them can lead to a larger conversation surrounding current issues on climate change (and our responsibilities as a society). Again, lessons with Lawn Boy are ultimately about the Banned Book and bring awareness to our responsibility to unite against banned books.  

Social Studies
The Complete Maus (Art Spiegelman): This was another one that caught me completely off-guard. With the surprising resistance to any education surrounding the Holocaust, a topic in history that had unified Americans since 1946, it is increasingly urgent to include these texts in our classrooms. Maus is an accessible text for many learners. Teachers can differentiate lessons through engagement and meaning-making with the visual text, as well as identifying and analyzing historical events, the atrocities committed against 6,000, 000 million Jewish people, and the consequences for Jewish families like Vladek and Anya’s. 

Share Your Love Of Books
Those of you who are reading this post are doing so because you love books. Share your enjoyment of finding new books and highlight the books people are trying to hide, and the authors who are being silenced. Learning should be uncomfortable; becoming uncomfortable with situations and issues within books is a way for young learners to make sense of the world around them. We know that representation is crucial for learners and their development. Books offer multiple perspectives and provide resources for readers to engage with and learn from difficult situations and complex issues in a safe way. While challenges and bans tend to work out well for the authors through increased sales of books, we can’t forget the readers left behind without access to the book in their immediate community. 

Works Cited
Dutton, J. (2022, January 14). Black authors are being pulled from school libraries over Critical 
Race Theory Fears. Retrieved from: https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/black-authors-are-being-pulled-from-school-libraries-over-critical-race-theory-fears/ar-AASMIvW?ocid=BingNewsSearch

Kaur, H. (2019, November 3). Black kids at a higher rate than white kids. Here’s why we don’t 
hear about them. Retrieved from: https://www.cnn.com/2019/11/03/us/missing-children-of-color-trnd/index.html

O’Connell-Domench, A, (2022, August 18). Texas school district removes 41 books from shelves 
including Diary of Anne Frank and Bible. Retrieved from: https://thehill.com/changing-america/respect/equality/3607044-texas-school-district-removes-41-books-from-shelves-including-diary-of-anne-frank-and-bible/

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    Curators

    Melanie Hundley
    ​Melanie is a voracious reader and loves working with students, teachers, and authors.  As a former middle and high school teacher, she knows the value of getting good young adult books in kids' hands. She teaches young adult literature and writing methods classes.  She hopes that the Monday Motivator page will introduce teachers to great books and to possible ways to use those books in classrooms.
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    Emily Pendergrass
    Emily loves reading, students, and teachers! And her favorite thing is connecting texts with students and teachers. She hopes that this Monday Motivation page is helpful to teachers interested in building lifelong readers and writers! 
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    Jason DeHart
    In all of his work, Jason hopes to point teachers to quality resources and books that they can use. He strives to empower others and not make his work only about him or his interests. He is a also an advocate of using comics/graphic novels and media in classrooms, as well as curating a wide range of authors.
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