Abstract
Drawing on three years of partnership with residents of the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota, I discuss some of the insights and challenges of working toward a critical community engagement that is antiracist, anti-colonial, and "place-engaged" (Siemers et al., 2015). I specifically reflect on how the bridging of academic practice with Indigenous models of teaching and learning can offer a powerful way to center social justice in community engagement work. I model this approach by discussing academic concepts and pedagogies used in the classroom alongside Lakota concepts and stories shared during our engagement. I then include the voices of students as they critically reflect on lessons of racial privilege, Indigenous survivance, and reciprocity/allyship. Lastly, this article is my own attempt at some form of reciprocation, as a way to respond to the common expectation that many Lakota elders/teachers expressed during our time with them--that we share these lessons beyond the Reservation. [The page range (129-154) on .pdf is incorrect. The correct page range is p129-153.]
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Carwile, C. (2021). Race, Power, and Place: Lakota Lessons from Pine Ridge Reservation. Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning, 27(1). https://doi.org/10.3998/mjcsloa.3239521.0027.106
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