Intersectionality in Writing and Language Studies

Dialoguing, Decentering, and Co-Storying

Intersectionality in Writing and Language Studies offers a powerful and necessary intervention in writing and language studies, centering intersectionality not as a static framework but as a lived, dynamic process of dialogue, disruption, and co-construction. Through deeply reflective storytelling and rigorous critical analysis, Yasmine Romero challenges entrenched lines of thinking and invites educators and scholars to reimagine pedagogy, research, and relational practice in more equitable and humanizing ways. This is a courageous, intellectually rich, and transformative contribution that will resonate widely across language education and beyond.
Kisha Bryan Jordan, Tennessee State University

Intersectionality emerged as a critique of feminism from Black feminist activists and teacher-scholars in the 1970s. Intersectional perspectives illuminate how multiple aspects of identity come together and relate to one another. Yasmine Romero proposes intersectional processes for analyzing classroom talk and text, as well as innovating teaching and learning strategies attuned to students’ lived experiences, identities, and identification practices. Romero unpacks the relationships between teachers and students and how diverse identities and identification practices converge within pedagogical interactions. She establishes frameworks for teachers to forge connections between lived experiences and local and global issues that impact teaching and learning; suggests theoretical, methodological, and pedagogical practices that address multiple intersections converging within teaching and learning spaces; and empowers teachers to enact change through action-reflection processes of dialoguing, decentering, and co-storying.

about the author

Yasmine Romero

Yasmine Romero is associate professor of English at the University of Hawaiʻi-West Oʻahu.

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Yasmine Romero