Richard Allen and the Prehistory of Engaged Community Learning at HBCUs by Elizabeth Kimball

This essay argues that African American church founder Richard Allen (1760-1831) developed a rhetorical pedagogy that prefigures the
community literacy partnerships of later Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). While Allen did not enjoy the material opportunities of institutionalized higher learning, we can interpret passages from his autobiography as a rhetorical pedagogy that affirms the ways of knowing in language of his community, suggests a relationship between language and the truth, and points toward a community pedagogy rooted in language. Allen also figures as a rhetor whose own higher literacy is sponsored by his community, and who returns his rhetorical power to the community for its own betterment.

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