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This book documents the failed attempt of successive social studies
curriculum to create a sustainable mythic structure of Canadian
identity, and it situates teachers in the uneasy space between the
modernist concepts of national identity prescribed in the
curriculum and the lived world of the classrooms they experience
daily. In The Death of the Good Canadian, George H. Richardson
endeavors to represent the ambivalence of curriculum delivery in an
era when there is frequently a striking dissonance between the
rigid boundaries that the modernist curriculum creates between
national self and other, and the more hybrid and problematic sense
of national identity formation as an ongoing process of the
articulation of cultural difference, which is suggested by the
plural classrooms of the twenty-first century.
Drawing on critical pedagogy, post-colonial analysis, hermeneutic
interpretation, and reconceptualist curriculum frameworks, the
twenty chapters in this edited collection address, from
interrelated perspectives, a gap in the scholarly literature on the
theory, practice, and policy of global citizenship and global
citizenship education. The book provides readers with analyses and
interpretations of the existing state of global citizenship
education in post-secondary institutions, and stimulates discussion
about the field at a time when there is an intense debate about the
current drive to "internationalize" tertiary education and the role
global citizenship education should play in that process.
International and interdisciplinary in its examination of
post-secondary global citizenship education, the book will be
useful in courses that focus on policy formation, curriculum
development and theorizing in the field.
The discourse of civic education privileges liberal democratic
understandings of citizenship. Yet we know that such understandings
do not accurately represent the complex, plural, and problematic
nature of citizenship in contemporary society. To stimulate
discussion about new possibilities for teaching citizenship, this
volume brings together the work of Canadian and American curriculum
scholars to « trouble the existing canon of citizenship education.
Addressing themes as diverse as gender, sexual orientation,
globalization, agency, ontology, and interdisciplinarity, the
essays that make up this collection seek to enlarge and expand upon
the ways educators, curriculum developers, and policymakers might
approach teaching citizenship.
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