(Re)Constructing Memory: Textbooks, Identity, Nation, and State

This book engages readers in thirteen conversations presented by authors from around the world regarding the role that textbooks play in helping readers imagine membership in the nation. Authors’ voices come from a variety of contexts—some historical, some contemporary, some providing analyses over time. But they all consider the changing portrayal of diversity, belonging and exclusion in multiethnic and diverse societies where silenced, invisible, marginalized members have struggled to make their voices heard and to have their identities incorporated into the national narrative. The authors discuss portrayals of past exclusions around religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation, as they look at the shifting boundaries of insider and outsider. This book is thus about “who we are” not only demographically, but also in terms of the past, especially how and whether we teach discredited pasts through textbooks. The concluding chapters provides ways forward in thinking about what can be done to promote curricula that are more inclusive, critical and positively bonding, in increasingly larger and more inclusive contexts.

Prices from (excl. shipping):

€64.36€61.00 excl. VAT
Add to Cart
Introduction
Palimpsest Identities in the Imagining of the Nation: A Comparative Model
Pages: 1–24
Are Mexico’s Indigenous People Mexican?
The Exclusion of Diversity from Official Textbooks in Mexico
Pages: 25–48
The Struggle to be Seen
Changing Views of American Indians in U.S. High School History Textbooks
Pages: 49–72
Normalizing Subordination
White Fantasies of Black Identity in Textbooks Intended for Freed Slaves in the American South, 1863–1870
Pages: 73–91
From Ingenious to Ignorant, from Idyllic to Backwards
Representations of Rural Life in Six U.S. Textbooks over Half a Century
Pages: 93–119
“Within the Sound of Silence”
A Critical Examination of LGBQ Issues in National History Textbooks
Pages: 121–139
Asian Bodies, English Values
Creating an Anglophone Elite in British Malaya
Pages: 177–198
History and Civic Education in the Rainbow Nation
Citizenship, Identity, and Xenophobia in the New South Africa
Pages: 199–218
Re-Imagining Brotherhood
Republican Values and Representations of Nationhood in a Diversifying France
Pages: 219–236
Textbook and Identity
A Comparative Study of the Primary Social Education Curricula in Hong Kong and Singapore
Pages: 263–294
Reframing the National Narrative
Curricula Reform and History Textbooks in Turkey’s EU Era
Pages: 295–321
Vacuum in the Classroom?
Recent Trends in High School History Teaching and Textbooks in Zimbabwe
Pages: 323–341
Defining and Debating the Common “We”
Analyses of Citizen Formation beyond the Nation-State Mold
Pages: 343–353
School Textbooks, Us and Them
A Conclusion
Pages: 355–365
Educational Researchers and their students
  • Collapse
  • Expand

Manufacturer information:
Koninklijke Brill B.V. 
Plantijnstraat 2
2321 JC
Leiden / The Netherlands
productsafety@degruyterbrill.com