Both scholarly literature and popular media often depict predominantly negative and one-dimensional images of boys, especially African-American boys. Predictions of these boys’ anticipated difficulties in school and adulthood are equally prevalent. This paper reports qualitative research that features case studies of nine urban boys of color, aged nine to eleven, who participated in an afterschool program where they learned to create digital multimedia texts. Drawing on an analysis of the children’s patterns of participation, their multimodal products, and their social and intellectual growth over time, the study revealed that these children demonstrated many versions of male selves, and that their digital stories narrated these identities in ways that often challenged hegemonic versions of masculinity.
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Glynda Hull
Author
University of California, Berkeley
Nora Kenney
Author
University of California, Berkeley
Stacy Marple
Author
University of California, Berkeley
Ali Forsman-Schneider
Author
University of California, Berkeley
Citation
Publication Name:
Afterschool Matters
Volume:
Occasional Paper #6
Page Number:
1
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