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Hal Adams was a legendary radical educator who organized writing
workshops with people who had been written off during much of their
lives, marginalized for reasons of race, gender, class, and caste.
Hal detested the carelessness and neglect his students endured and
set about building spaces of respect and reparation. Fostering
communities of local writers and publishing their work in journals
of "ordinary thought," the work brought pride and dignity to the
authors, carrying the wisdom of their narratives into and beyond
their communities. In the traditions of Paulo Freire, Antonio
Gramsci, and C.L.R. James, Hal based his approach on the conviction
that every person is a philosopher, artist, and storyteller, and
that only the insights and imaginings of the oppressed can sow
seeds of authentic social change. Every Person Is a Philosopher
gathers essays by classroom and community educators deeply
influenced by Hal's educational work and vision, and several essays
by Hal Adams. They explore diverse ways this humanizing pedagogy
can be applied in a wide range of contexts, and consider its
potential to transform students and teachers alike. This is an
ideal text for courses in educational foundations, multicultural
education, urban studies, sociology of education, English
education, social justice education, literacy education,
socio-cultural contexts of teaching, adult education, cultural
studies, schools and communities, and popular education.
This study counters the view that Franklin D. Roosevelt
hegemonically exalted Thomas Jefferson to iconic dominance during
the Great Depression. It analyzes the diversity of those who
appropriated Jefferson to find answers to the socio-economic crisis
and modern industrial capitalism. This discourse analysis, spanning
the ideological spectrum between 1929-1945, reveals that the
creation of the Jefferson icon-in various forms of
representation-generated counterhegemonic varieties of Jefferson
because the appropriators grafted their values onto the historical
figure which led to its transformation. These competing versions of
Jefferson expressed a reformed sense of national values not only
through commonalities but through the flexibility of interpretative
and representational differences.
Hal Adams was a legendary radical educator who organized writing
workshops with people who had been written off during much of their
lives, marginalized for reasons of race, gender, class, and caste.
Hal detested the carelessness and neglect his students endured and
set about building spaces of respect and reparation. Fostering
communities of local writers and publishing their work in journals
of "ordinary thought," the work brought pride and dignity to the
authors, carrying the wisdom of their narratives into and beyond
their communities. In the traditions of Paulo Freire, Antonio
Gramsci, and C.L.R. James, Hal based his approach on the conviction
that every person is a philosopher, artist, and storyteller, and
that only the insights and imaginings of the oppressed can sow
seeds of authentic social change. Every Person Is a Philosopher
gathers essays by classroom and community educators deeply
influenced by Hal's educational work and vision, and several essays
by Hal Adams. They explore diverse ways this humanizing pedagogy
can be applied in a wide range of contexts, and consider its
potential to transform students and teachers alike. This is an
ideal text for courses in educational foundations, multicultural
education, urban studies, sociology of education, English
education, social justice education, literacy education,
socio-cultural contexts of teaching, adult education, cultural
studies, schools and communities, and popular education.
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Reading Claudius (Paperback)
Caroline Heller; Edited by (editors-in-chief) Tobias Steed
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R368
Discovery Miles 3 680
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Traditional dissertations aiming to illuminate the landscapes of
education are often too turgid and poorly written to have
far-reaching readership. This book examines the inner workings of a
doctoral course focused on teaching qualitative researchers strong
narrative writing. By the time doctoral students finish their
dissertation research, bolstered by theoretical grounding and time
in the field, they are in a unique position to offer insights about
education that should be heard in the public arena, not just during
dissertation defenses. For this to happen, doctoral students need
to know how to achieve their writerly goals. This book focuses on
helping doctoral students and all qualitative researchers do just
that. It is also an excellent resource for professors teaching
narrative writing. Readers will learn how to use narrative writing
to "tell the story in the data" so their research will be read and
potentially infuse policy decisions with the complexity such
decisions deserve. Book Features: Assists students and qualitative
researchers with writing research in an engaging and informative
manner. Focuses on the craft and ethics of writing as an essential
constituent of good research. Offers practical guidance appropriate
for self-study or for professors of education who teach writing.
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