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Since the emergence of postmodern social theory, history has been
haunted by predictions of its imminent end. Postmodernism has been
accused of making historical research and writing untenable,
encouraging the proliferation of revisionist histories, providing
fertile ground for historical denial, and promoting the adoption of
a mournful view of the past. This provocative book re-examines the
nature of the alleged "threat" to history posed by postmodernism,
and explores the implications of postmodern social theory for
history as curriculum. Interrupting History will be of interest to
curricularists and critical pedagogues around the globe, and to
history educators at all levels of education. Making an important
contribution to the struggle for critical and effective histories,
it is a must-read text for those studying or teaching history
today.
Since the emergence of postmodern social theory, history has been
haunted by predictions of its imminent end. Postmodernism has been
accused of making historical research and writing untenable,
encouraging the proliferation of revisionist histories, providing
fertile ground for historical denial, and promoting the adoption of
a mournful view of the past. This provocative book re-examines the
nature of the alleged "threat" to history posed by postmodernism,
and explores the implications of postmodern social theory for
history as curriculum. Interrupting History will be of interest to
curricularists and critical pedagogues around the globe, and to
history educators at all levels of education. Making an important
contribution to the struggle for critical and effective histories,
it is a must-read text for those studying or teaching history
today.
For over a century, teachers, parents, and school leaders have
lamented a loss of 'discipline' in classrooms. Caught between
guidance approaches on the one hand and a call for zero tolerance
on the other, current debates rarely venture beyond the terrain of
implementation strategies. This book aims to reinvigorate thinking
on 'discipline' in education by challenging the notions,
foundations, and paradigms that underpin its use in policy and
practice. It confronts the understanding of 'discipline' as purely
repressive, and raises the possibility of enabling forms and
conceptualizations of 'discipline' that challenge tokenistic
avenues for students' liberation and enhance students' capacity for
agency. This book is an essential resource for university
lecturers, pre-service and in-service teachers, policymakers, and
educational administrators who want to re-think 'discipline' in
education in ways that move beyond a concern with managing
disorder, to generate alternative understandings that can make a
difference in students' lives.
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