Hilary Janks addresses key questions about literacy and power in
this landmark text that is both engaging and accessible.
Her central argument is that competing orientations to critical
literacy education domination (power), access, diversity, design
foreground one over the other, but are crucially interdependent and
need to work together to create possibilities for redesign and
social action that serve a social justice agenda. She examines the
theory underpinning each orientation, and develops new theory in
the argument for interdependence and integration.
Sitting at the interface between theory and practice, constantly
moving from one to the other, the text is rich with examples of how
to use these orientations in real teaching contexts, and how to use
them to counterbalance one another.
In the groundbreaking final chapter Janks considers how the
rationalist underpinning of critical literacy tends to exclude the
non-rational shows ways of working beyond reason pleasure and play,
desire and the unconscious and makes the case that these need to be
taken seriously given their power to cut across the work of
critical literacy educators working from any orientation."
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