In African-American epistemology, a distinction is sometimes
made between "street knowledge" and "book knowledge," or between knowledge derived from primary experience and knowledge derived from secondary sources.
The distinction may be analogous to the distinction between direct and indirect
knowledge, or to the distinction between practical and theoretical knowledge.
But can’t these two kinds of knowledge be combined? Can’t they support and supplement each other? Can’t a
person have both kinds of knowledge?
Does street knowledge, which
may consist of various insights and adaptations necessary for survival in a hostile, dangerous, or unstable social environment, represent a primary form
of knowledge? Does book knowledge, which may consist of formal education necessary
for vocational, professional, or technological achievement, represent a secondary
form of knowledge? Are these two kinds of knowledge perhaps interdependent and mutually
complementary? Does the distinction between them represent a false
dichotomy?
Street knowledge and book knowledge may
differ in the contexts or settings in which they are learned or taught. They
may also differ in the nature and mode of their narrativity. It is tempting to
suggest that street knowledge is more dependent on the study of oral narrative, while book knowledge is more dependent on the study of written narrative. But would this be to posit a false dichotomy between oral and written narrative, and between
speech and writing?
The two kinds of knowledge may require
different kinds of cognitive skills or abilities. Street knowledge
may depend more on an ability to “think on one’s feet,” and on a kind of
intellectual adroitness or dexterity (although these abilities may to some
extent be necessary to anyone who intends to develop any depth of book
knowledge). Book knowledge may depend more on a kind of rigorous intellectual training and discipline, and on an ability to read or engage with written texts (although
these skills may to some extent be necessary to anyone who intends to develop
any depth of street knowledge).
Street knowledge may be favorably
perceived as being expressed by social adeptness, savoir faire, urbanity, and worldly
sophistication. It may be attributed to an individual who is seen as streetwise,
shrewd, or clever. It may also be attributed to an individual who is seen as confident in her ability to cope with unusual or unforeseen situations. However,
it may be unfavorably perceived as an unlettered and undisciplined form of underhandedness, deception, fraud, or intentional misrepresentation.
Book knowledge, on the other hand,
may be favorably perceived as a conventional and generally accepted (although often unapplied and untested) form of knowledge. However, it may also be
unfavorably perceived as a second-hand, learned-by-rote, entirely theoretical, and empirically unreliable form of knowledge.
Are there any grounds for assuming
that the distinction between street knowledge and book knowledge is any more closely
adhered to by African-American epistemology than the analogous distinction between practical and theoretical knowledge is adhered to by other epistemologies? Such
an assumption may indeed be mistaken, since the lack of formality with which
the distinction is adhered to by African-American epistemology is revealed by
the colloquial nature of the terms themselves.
An important implication of the
distinction between book knowledge and street knowledge, however, is that book
knowledge, or the knowledge gained through formal education, may often be
acquired through a kind of miseducation. For example, the
knowledge gained through formal education may be taught by an educational
system that is biased against racial, ethnic, and other minorities. This educational
system may ignore the relevance and importance of
African-American, Hispanic, Native American, and other minority
group cultural experience to the project of knowledge acquisition.
There may also be senseless
disparagement, by those who perceive themselves as having street knowledge, of
those who are said to have only book knowledge, just as there may be senseless
disparagement, by those who perceive themselves as having book knowledge, of
those who are said to have only street knowledge. The two kinds of knowledge may be misconceived as kinds of knowledge assigned to individuals of particular social or cultural backgrounds.