AskHistorians Podcast Episode 184: The Silencing of Anti-Racist Educators in New York City in the Mid-20th Century
AskHistorians Podcast Episode 184 is live!
The [AskHistorians Podcast](https://askhistorians.libsyn.com/) is a project that highlights the users and answers that have helped make r/AskHistorians one of the largest history discussion forums on the internet. You can subscribe to us via Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, or RSS, and now on YouTube, and Google Play. If there is another index you'd like the podcast listed on, let us know!
This Episode:
In this episode, /u/gankom talks with Dr. Lauren Lefty, Dr. Andrew Feffer, and /u/Kugelfang52 about the assault on the anti-racism programs of New York City teachers between 1930 and 1960. Notably, these efforts, often led by communist teachers, were opposed not only by conservative educators, but by liberal groups as well. The ultimate destruction of these efforts wrecked community building projects, removed or coerced into silence some of the system's most outspoken anti-racist educators.
Very excited to see my podcast debut! Thanks for letting me participate and listen in on such great discussion!
This was an excellent episode, thanks to u/gankom and u/Kugelfang52 for amazing contributions. As a an avowedly anti-racist teacher of colour in the UK my context is obviously different from that in mid-20th century New York, but there are still quite stark parallels.
Do either of the contributors, or other users, have any recommendations for further reading on this history? Teacher workload remains a killer, so journal articles are much preferable to full length books!
I think that was the most depressing and hopeless thing I've ever heard, so, hmmm, thanks? Since I never comment, thank you AskHistorians for all these free resources with, somehow, ever increasing quality