In a Silent Way

2016 Best Book Awards: Fiction: Multicultural Finalist

In a Silent Way offers a moving portrayal of a committed, young teacher-activist, Jeanna, who is determined to effect change in her urban school and community. Jeanna’s culturally relevant and inclusive pedagogy, and her determination to never give up on her students, ultimately wins their respect and admiration. All the while, Hetzel makes sure to shine a much needed light on undemocratic practices and unequal gendered power dynamics in social and racial justice movements.” 
―Jonathan Kozol, education activist and award-winning author of Death at an Early Age and Savage Inequalities: Children in American Schools

In a Silent Way chronicles the coming of age in the late sixties of young Jeanna Kendall as she quietly facilitates a close-knit community of learners in a progressive urban school, grapples with racism and sexism within her community activist group, and experiences the extreme highs and lows of her first intimate relationship—which happens to be with a revered and powerful community leader.

Jeanna encounters all the same issues we confront today: youth of color demeaned and destroyed, wise community elders discounted by leaders who “know better,” and the “sexploitation” of women in the movement. Gradually overwhelmed by the mounting challenges she faces on all fronts, and on the verge of a breakdown, a crisis emerges within her movement group that transforms everything and everyone and opens up a new world of possibilities—ones deeply relevant to us today.

Author: Mary Jo Hetzel

Publication Date: October 18, 2016

 

Description

2016 Best Book Awards: Fiction: Multicultural Finalist

In a Silent Way offers a moving portrayal of a committed, young teacher-activist, Jeanna, who is determined to effect change in her urban school and community. Jeanna’s culturally relevant and inclusive pedagogy, and her determination to never give up on her students, ultimately wins their respect and admiration. All the while, Hetzel makes sure to shine a much needed light on undemocratic practices and unequal gendered power dynamics in social and racial justice movements.”
―Jonathan Kozol, education activist and award-winning author of Death at an Early Age and Savage Inequalities: Children in American Schools

In A Silent Way is a deeply personal historical novel of importance, because it reveals what happens when the convergence of race, gender, and class struggles intersect inside people’s lives and communities. Mary Jo Hetzel has written an unconventional coming of age story of a young white woman swept up into the political whirlwind of urban America in the late sixties. A must-read for those who want to know the roots of today’s #BlackLivesMatter Movement, as well as the contemporary offshoots of the Occupy Walls Street Movement.”
―Sam E. Anderson, co-editor of The Black Activist Journal, writer, and education activist

In a Silent Way captures the racial, class, and leadership issues of the 1960s that continue today as they play out in an alternative school and multi-racial movement group. The main character of the teacher is are well developed, and her students’ quandaries, anger, fear, despair, then hope and action ring true. Leading by listening, in the classroom and the movement, emerges as an essential touchstone. In the novel, as I’ve learned in my own work, students can and do lead, often seeing more clearly and less encumbered by ego than adults.”
―Monty Neill, Executive Director of FairTest

“Much as her main character does with her students, author Mary Jo Hetzel grabs hold of your heart and mind in this compelling, beautifully written, and breathtakingly honest story of an idealistic young teacher’s struggle to connect and work for a better world. In a Silent Way will resonate powerfully with teachers, students, parents, and anyone involved or interested in today’s struggles for educational, social and racial justice.”
―Lisa Guisbond, Executive Director of Citizens for Public Education

“At its core, In a Silent Way is about a young teacher, Jeanna, unleashing the brilliance and unique talents of her students while seeking to remain true to herself within a fractured grassroots social justice group. By sharing character Jeanna’s educational practice, Mary Jo Hetzel offers compelling guidance to all those interested in creating an urban educational system that promotes the aspirations of youth, teacher, parents, and community.
―Ellen Hewett, Director of the National College Transition Network at World Education

“This riveting, engaging journey of a young, white, activist educator in the late 60s unfolds unlike any other story previously told. This young woman chooses to join in the struggle for Civil Rights, while allowing her students to utilize their passions to change the course of their lives in an urban alternative high school. The reader is drawn in as the story unfolds, and taken along unanticipated pathways where the incidents and learnings that occur are completely applicable to this day. Since learning from our history may prevent future missteps, this powerful novel is a must-read.”
―Karla Nicholson, Executive Director, Haymarket People’s Fund

“Mary Jo Hetzel is an activist and humanist of the first order. Her weaving of students’ projects into exciting presentations shows how students can soar when a teacher believes in them. I hope this novel will help people see the need for change in our ‘change’ organizations and our schools.”
―Sandra McIntosh, Chair of The Coalition for Equal, Quality Education and former Parent Coordinator at English High School

About the Author

In a Silent Way emerged out of Mary Jo Hetzel’s experience teaching in one of the first alternative high schools in the late 1960s, and from her lifelong involvement in grassroots social movements for racial, economic, and sexual justice. She was the founding director, and then a faculty member, of the Boston Campus of Springfield College School of Human Services for twenty-seven years. She is currently active in the struggle for justice and quality in urban public education, and in co-hosting Circle processes, rooted in indigenous principles, in an effort to break down hierarchies of power and oppression and co-create the conditions for community self-empowerment and institutional transformation. She enjoys jazz, creative writing, film, drama, athletics, nature, spirit, and friendship. Hetzel lives in Jamaica Plain, a community of Boston, Massachusetts.

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