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What does it mean to be pedagogical in a post-truth landscape? How
might feminist thought and action work to intervene in this
environment? Gender in an Era of Post-truth Populism draws together
leading feminist scholars of gender and education to explore the
current significance of the rise of populist policies and
discourses and the challenges it poses to the hard-won battles
regarding the rights of women, immigrants, and minorities. Offering
the first detailed feminist intervention in this space, the
collection explores the significance of populism for feminist
pedagogies and practices in relation to gender and education. This
exploration has significance for broader and urgent questions of
our times regarding knowledge, authority, truth, power and harm and
considers the potential for feminist interventions in relation to
pedagogies and activisms to speak back and disrupt populist
agendas.
The chapters in this book grapple in varying ways with Barbara
Adam’s concept of timescapes, which provides a powerful metaphor
that extends the imagery of landscapes to enable an understanding
of time as entwined with space, conceptually drawn and constituted
experientially. Space-time is deeply relational, contextual and
experiential, forming overarching narratives of higher education,
its purpose and its future. As timescapes become in/visibilised and
subsumed, in various ways and in different contexts, into hegemonic
discourses of individual responsibility and choice, new temporal
framings must then be carefully re-negotiated and self-managed by
students and teachers. The chapters thus draw on theoretical and
empirical contributions to examine intersecting pressures and
[im]possibilities across different timescapes in higher education.
This book was originally published as a special issue of the
journal Teaching in Higher Education.
Higher education is in a current state of flux and uncertainty,
with profound changes being shaped largely by the imperatives of
global neoliberalism. Changing Pedagogical Spaces in Higher
Education forms a unique addition to the literature and includes
significant practical pointers in developing pedagogical
strategies, interventions and practices that seek to address the
complexities of identity formations, difference, inequality and
misrecognition. Drawing on research studies based across
California, England, Italy, Portugal and Spain, this book analyses
complex pedagogical re/formations across competing discourses of
gender, diversity, equity, global neoliberalism and transformation,
and aims: to critique and reconceptualise widening participation
practices in higher education to consider the complex intersections
between difference, equity, global neoliberalism and transformation
to analyse the intersections of identity formations, social
inequalities and pedagogical practices to contribute to broader
widening participation policy agendas to develop an analysis of
gendered experiences, intersected by race and class, of higher
education practices and relations. Changing Pedagogical Spaces in
Higher Education will speak to those concerned with how theory
relates to everyday practices and development of teaching in higher
education and those who are interested in theorising about
pedagogies, identities and inequalities in higher education.
Engaging readers in a dialogue of the relationship between theory
and practice, this thought-provoking and challenging text will be
of particular interest to researchers, academic developers and
policy-makers in the field of higher education studies.
Higher education is in a current state of flux and uncertainty,
with profound changes being shaped largely by the imperatives of
global neoliberalism. Changing Pedagogical Spaces in Higher
Education forms a unique addition to the literature and includes
significant practical pointers in developing pedagogical
strategies, interventions and practices that seek to address the
complexities of identity formations, difference, inequality and
misrecognition. Drawing on research studies based across
California, England, Italy, Portugal and Spain, this book analyses
complex pedagogical re/formations across competing discourses of
gender, diversity, equity, global neoliberalism and transformation,
and aims: to critique and reconceptualise widening participation
practices in higher education to consider the complex intersections
between difference, equity, global neoliberalism and transformation
to analyse the intersections of identity formations, social
inequalities and pedagogical practices to contribute to broader
widening participation policy agendas to develop an analysis of
gendered experiences, intersected by race and class, of higher
education practices and relations. Changing Pedagogical Spaces in
Higher Education will speak to those concerned with how theory
relates to everyday practices and development of teaching in higher
education and those who are interested in theorising about
pedagogies, identities and inequalities in higher education.
Engaging readers in a dialogue of the relationship between theory
and practice, this thought-provoking and challenging text will be
of particular interest to researchers, academic developers and
policy-makers in the field of higher education studies.
Arising from work by the Gender and Lifelong Learning Group of the
Gender and Education Association, this book presents
reconceptualisations of lifelong learning. It argues that the
current field of lifelong learning is based on certain hidden
values and assumptions and examines the mechanisms by which
exclusionary discourses and practices are reproduced and
maintained. The book opens up ways of conceptualising learning that
takes into account multiple and shifting formations of learners
from different social contexts. The authors broaden what counts as
learning and who counts as a learner, offering different
understandings of lifelong learning that are able to include
currently marginalised values and principles. Organised in four
sections the book looks at: reclaiming - it draws on feminist and
post-structural conceptual frameworks to create a critical analysis
of the current 'field' of lifelong learning retelling - it tells
the tales of different multi-positions in lifelong learning
revisioning - it moves from narrative to analysis and the authors
present their revisioning of learning which provide the tools to
reconceptualise the field of lifelong learning reconstructing - it
furthers the discussion to outline new approaches to and practices
in lifelong learning.
Arising from work by the Gender and Lifelong Learning Group of the
Gender and Education Association, this book presents
reconceptualisations of lifelong learning. It argues that the
current field of lifelong learning is based on certain hidden
values and assumptions and examines the mechanisms by which
exclusionary discourses and practices are reproduced and
maintained. The book opens up ways of conceptualising learning that
takes into account multiple and shifting formations of learners
from different social contexts. The authors broaden what counts as
learning and who counts as a learner, offering different
understandings of lifelong learning that are able to include
currently marginalised values and principles. Organised in four
sections the book looks at: reclaiming - it draws on feminist and
post-structural conceptual frameworks to create a critical analysis
of the current 'field' of lifelong learning retelling - it tells
the tales of different multi-positions in lifelong learning
revisioning - it moves from narrative to analysis and the authors
present their revisioning of learning which provide the tools to
reconceptualise the field of lifelong learning reconstructing - it
furthers the discussion to outline new approaches to and practices
in lifelong learning.
What does it mean to be pedagogical in a post-truth landscape? How
might feminist thought and action work to intervene in this
environment? Gender in an Era of Post-truth Populism draws together
leading feminist scholars of gender and education to explore the
current significance of the rise of populist policies and
discourses and the challenges it poses to the hard-won battles
regarding the rights of women, immigrants, and minorities. Offering
the first detailed feminist intervention in this space, the
collection explores the significance of populism for feminist
pedagogies and practices in relation to gender and education. This
exploration has significance for broader and urgent questions of
our times regarding knowledge, authority, truth, power and harm and
considers the potential for feminist interventions in relation to
pedagogies and activisms to speak back and disrupt populist
agendas.
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