Abstract
This essay considers the difficulty of seeing systems of oppression—a challenging first step of writing for social change. I argue that service-learning faculty and public writing scholars have relied on outdated ways of thinking about racism and oppression, treating social issues as isolated instances of discrimination. Instead, by drawing from Michelle Alexander’s The New Jim Crow, I argue that we need to recognize that mass incarceration has created a new a racial caste system and is the root cause uniting many social problems. Mass incarceration and neoliberalism work together to exclude millions of people from economic and civic life, stain them with moral condemnation so that they remain invisible to the majority, and divert public attention from the flaws in our political and economic structures. I use examples from a local nonprofit to illustrate how this framework offers a new approach to servicelearning and public writing.
- Journal
- Community Literacy Journal
- Published
- 2021-02-09
- DOI
- 10.25148/clj.11.1.009252
- Open Access
- OA PDF Bronze
- Topics
Citation Context
Cited by in this index (0)
No articles in this index cite this work.
Cites in this index (0)
No references match articles in this index.
Related Articles
-
Literacy in Composition Studies Feb 2026Girdharry, Kristi
-
College Composition and Communication Feb 2026Jessica Pauszek; Veronica House; Paula Mathieu
-
Journal of Technical Writing and Communication Jan 2026Toward a Justice-Oriented Professionalism: Lessons Learned From a Critical Service-Learning Project in a Professional Writing Course ↗Renea C. Frey; Jeffrey M. Gerding; Ethan Nichols; Danielle Stone
-
College Composition and Communication Sep 2024Understanding Writing Instructors’ Feelings toward the Affordances of Multimodal Social Advocacy Projects: Implications for Service-Learning Pedagogies ↗Jason Tham; Jialei Jiang
-
Reflections: A Journal of Community-Engaged Writing and Rhetoric Dec 2023