黑料不打烊

‘Shaking the Table’ amplifies unheard voices in higher education

Stephanie Hernandez Rivera and Jonathan McElderry鈥檚 new edited book, 鈥淪haking the Table: Survival and Healing Amongst Identity Center Practitioners,鈥 gives identity center professionals space to share their stories. Available Nov. 24.

The idea for 鈥淪haking the Table: Survival and Healing Amongst Identity Center Practitioners鈥 began, as many inspirational ideas do, with a conversation.

In discussing the nation鈥檚 social and political climate surrounding diversity, equity and inclusion, Stephanie Hernandez Rivera, assistant professor in the Master of Higher Education Program and Dr. Jo Watts Williams School of Education Emerging Professor, and Jonathan A. McElderry, dean of Student Inclusive Excellence and assistant professor, reflected on the need for scholarship to include the testimonies of those doing the work in identity-based centers.

鈥淥ne thing that鈥檚 missing from scholarship is the actual stories of people who have worked in those spaces,鈥 McElderry said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e read about identity-based centers in scholarship, but rarely do you get to hear the actual voices of those who lived it.鈥

That conversation laid the foundation for the book, serving as a collection that amplifies the voices of practitioners often left out of academic narratives.

The power of collective voice

Across 18 chapters, 鈥淪haking the Table: Survival and Healing Amongst Identity Center Practitioners鈥 lifts the lived experiences of practitioners working across identity-based centers, including Black, Asian American, Latinx, multicultural, women鈥檚, undocumented students, and gender and sexuality centers. Stories explore how professionals navigate grief, burnout, resistance and renewal.

Book cover for Shaking the Table: Survival and Healing Amongst Identity Center Practitioners. The background is a deep purple, with the title in large pink gradient lettering. Smaller white text lists the editors, Stephanie Hernandez Rivera and Jonathan A. McElderry, and notes a foreword by Jordan Shelby West. The series header 鈥淚dentity & Practice in Higher Education 鈥 Student Affairs鈥 appears at the top.These narratives embody what McElderry calls 鈥渢he power of the collective and community.鈥

鈥淲e can鈥檛 do this alone or in silos,鈥 McElderry said. 鈥淭he power of the collective and community is what moves the work forward. When we collaborate, students, campuses and communities all grow stronger.鈥

Echoing McElderry鈥檚 perspective, Hernandez Rivera expressed, 鈥淲e鈥檙e part of a larger legacy of people committed to supporting the experiences of historically marginalized groups,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his project reminds us that we have our own knowledge and assets that sustain those efforts.鈥

That legacy runs deep for both editors, which is rooted in their shared history and the experiences that first shaped their work.

A full-circle moment

For Hernandez Rivera and McElderry, the book is deeply personal. The idea traces back to their time working together at the University of Missouri during the 2015 campus protests that brought national attention to racial justice in higher education.

鈥淲hen we were at Mizzou, we didn鈥檛 have a voice or agency in what was going on,鈥 McElderry said. 鈥淲e weren鈥檛 allowed to do press or share our experiences. After I transitioned roles in 2016, we published our together as a way to finally give voice to what happened.鈥

鈥淪haking the Table鈥 ensures this legacy continues and that the professionals who work in identity spaces can tell their stories.

Reflecting on that time, Hernandez Rivera described working on the book as both poetic and vindicating.

鈥淭his feels like a full-circle moment,鈥 she said. 鈥淢aybe the space we wanted ten years ago is the space we鈥檙e now creating through this project.鈥

When stories become strength

While 鈥淪haking the Table鈥 highlights practitioners’ experiences, its deeper impact lies in what those stories make possible 鈥 connection, healing and truth through storytelling. For McElderry and Hernandez Rivera, storytelling isn鈥檛 just reflection, it鈥檚 resistance and restoration.

The book鈥檚 strength lies in the vulnerability and courage its contributors demonstrate in allowing themselves to be seen. Through storytelling, identity center professionals honor the past, affirm the present and imagine new possibilities.

鈥淲riting this chapter was vulnerable,鈥 Luis Garay, contributor and 黑料不打烊鈥檚 director of the Gender and LGBTQIA Center, said. 鈥淚 was sharing parts of my story that aren鈥檛 often talked about. That vulnerability was new for me.鈥

Building on that idea, Hernandez Rivera describes how connection is a driving force behind her decision to tell her story.

鈥淥ne reason I write the kind of scholarship I do is to create points of connection for people who might otherwise feel isolated,鈥 she said. 鈥淐ollective storytelling reminds us that what we feel and experience is valid and valuable.鈥

At its heart, 鈥淪haking the Table鈥 is grounded in collective storytelling. Each chapter challenges silence, reclaims agency and reminds readers that using their voice is itself a radical act.

鈥淧eople will see the joy and the pain. Many of those in these roles carry a lot they don鈥檛 share. The book exposes that quiet endurance. And that鈥檚 what makes it powerful.鈥

A legacy that continues

鈥淪haking the Table鈥 continues the legacy Hernandez Rivera and McElderry began years ago, ensuring that identity center professionals are seen, heard and valued.

鈥淚t鈥檚 ironic,鈥 McElderry said. 鈥淭his book is being released 10 years to the month after the Mizzou protests. It鈥檚 a moment to stop and reflect on how much has changed 鈥 some for good, some for bad 鈥 and how far we鈥檝e come in centering humanity in this work.鈥

鈥淪haking the Table鈥 will be released on Nov. 24 and available for .

The work doesn鈥檛 end with the final chapter. Hernandez Rivera and McElderry have shared that a second volume is already in the works, as there are still more stories to tell. They continue to advocate for identity center professionals through ongoing scholarship, media and conversation, including an upcoming episode of the podcast, set to release Wednesday, Nov. 26.