Handbook of Cultural Politics and Education

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In academia, the effects of the “cultural turn” have been felt deeply. In everyday life, tenets from cultural politics have influenced how people behave or regard their options for action, such as the reconfiguration of social movements, protests, and praxis in general. Many authors writing in this field are known for their scholarship and social activism, both of which are arguably guided by principles of cultural politics about the nature of representation and the deployment of power in political discourses. The Handbook of Cultural Politics and Education is less an attempt to standardize contemporary educational scholarship and more a collection that engages the problems and promises of recent themes in social and cultural thought, which require our attention and demand a response. In other words, it opens doors to questions rather than convenient answers to difficult educational dilemmas. The Handbook is part of the appraisal of an opening created by interdisciplinary writings on such themes as representation, civil society, cultural struggle, subjectivity, and media within the context of education. Indeed cultural politics troubles traditional frameworks in search of critical explanations concerning education’s place within society. The contributions in the collection support this endeavor.

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Affirming Ambivalence
Introduction to Cultural Politics and Education
Pages: 1–45
Neoliberalism, Pedagogy, and Cultural Politics
Beyond the Theatre of Cruelty
Pages: 47–70
Lessons Learned from Enron
What the Business World Really has to Teach Us
Pages: 71–86
Conflicts of the Education Faculty
Derrida and Democratic Cultural Politics in the Postmodern University
Pages: 87–109
Class-Ifying Race
The Compassionate Racism of the Right and Why Class Still Matters
Pages: 111–140
A Global Standpoint?
Reification, Globalization, and Contemporary Praxis
Pages: 141–160
The Frankfurt School and Education
Critical Theory and Youth Alienation
Pages: 161–174
Why Culture?
The Political Economy of Cultural Politics
Pages: 175–192
Ideology and its Modes of Existence
Toward an Althusserian Theory of Race and Racism
Pages: 193–217
Performativity
Making the Subjects of Education
Pages: 219–236
Autism as Enemy
Metaphor and Cultural Politics
Pages: 237–268
Re-Reading Class, Re-Reading Cultural Studies, Re-Reading Tradition
Neo-Marxist Nostalgia and the Remorselessly Vanishing Pasts
Pages: 269–288
Education After The Death of the Subject
Levinas and the Pedagogy of Interruption
Pages: 289–300
Education, Cultural Politics, and the New Hegemony
How Multiculturalism became a Neoconservative Weapon
Pages: 341–371
‘Just The Right Amount of Racism’
The Cultural Politics of Race and Reform
Pages: 381–401
What is this ‘Black’ in Black Education?
Imagining a Cultural Politics without Guarantees
Pages: 403–422
A ‘Symbolic Rebirth’ of the Bootstrap Guild
Applying Kenneth Burke to the Cultural Politics of the “Negro Problem” Underlying Black-White Test Score Gap Ideology
Pages: 423–449
Thinking Latina/o Education with and From Chicana/Latina Feminist Cultural Studies
Emerging Pathways – Decolonial Possibilities
Pages: 451–476
It’s the Masculinity, Stupid
A Cultural Studies Analysis of Media, the Presidency and Pedagogy
Pages: 477–507
The Im-Personated and Performative Pedagogies of Social Change
Informal Education’s Ever-Varying Tropes
Pages: 509–526
Toward a Theory of Poemness
Cultural Politics and Transformative Pedagogies
Pages: 527–540
Technological Transformation, New Literacies and Democracy
Toward a Reconstruction of Education
Pages: 555–570
“In these difficult times, critical pedagogy needs all the theoretical inspiration it can muster. This formidable collection of provocative texts, skillfully edited by Zeus Leonardo, draws on a wide range of ideas from leading contemporary theorists and imaginatively applies their lessons to the thorny problems of the real world.” —Martin Jay, Sidney Hellman Ehrman Professor of History, University of California, Berkeley
“This volume is a cutting-edge contribution to the study of cultural politics in education. Chapter authors affirm the critical role of culture as a set of material practices; they excavate and develop foundational thinking on ideology, discourse, race, and the array of post-studies in social theory. The book is at once an accessible introduction to, and a brilliant advancement of, the field of cultural analysis.” —Jean Anyon, Professor of Urban Education at City University of New York, Graduate Center and author of Ghetto Schooling
Educational Researchers and their students
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