Londie T. Martin

6 articles
University of Arizona

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  1. “Upon You They Depend for the Light of Knowledge”: Women and Children in the Rhetoric of Mary Church Terrell
    Abstract

    In her position as both teacher and administrator in the late nineteenth century, Mary Church Terrell navigated the racism and sexism of an increasingly bureaucratic educational landscape to emerge as a powerful, activist voice for children. Through a closer look at the strategies she and others used to advocate for social uplift via children and the home, we can continue to uncover the uneven rhetorical terrain black women navigated as they advocated for youth within an environment that constructed black children as outside of normative conceptions of childhood.

    doi:10.1080/07350198.2018.1497885
  2. Review of Shari J. Stenberg’s Repurposing Composition: Feminist Interventions for a Neoliberal Age
  3. Performing Urgency: Slamming and Spitting as Critical and Creative Response to State Crisis
    Abstract

    Our initial research questions are concerned with the ways in which youth slam performance in this space contains the potential for not only response to, but urgent and active movements against, regressive contexts, such as the legislative moves in Arizona that have limited young people’s comprehensive access to narratives of sexuality, health, and rights.

  4. Valuing Youth Voices and Differences through Community Literacy Projects: Review of Detroit Future Youth Curriculum Mixtape and Freeing Ourselves: A Guide to Health and Self-Love for Brown Bois
    Abstract

    community literacy

    doi:10.25148/clj.8.1.009116
  5. Space | Event | Movement: Reflections on a Spatial & Visual Rhetorics Graduate Course
    Abstract

    Our experiences in English 696e: Spatial and Visual Rhetorics culminated in a semester project that included large-scale installation projects and mini-workshops. This semester project was anevent—titled svr2—that we hosted for our local community, particularly targeting an audience of first-year composition instructors who would be teaching visual and spatial analysis to undergraduate students as part of the University of Arizona's first-year composition curriculum.

  6. Thirdspacing the University: Performing Spatial and Visual Literacies