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Illustrates how the children of immigrants use art to grapple with
issues of citizenship, state violence, and belonging Young
immigrant children often do not have the words to express how their
lives are shaped by issues of immigration, legal status, and
state-sanctioned violence. Yet they are able to communicate its
effects on them using art. Based on ten years of work with
immigrant children as young as six years old in Arizona and
California— and featuring an analysis of three hundred drawings,
theater performances, and family interviews—Silvia Rodriguez Vega
provides accounts of children’s challenges with deportation and
family separation during the Obama and Trump administrations. While
much of the literature on immigrant children depicts them as
passive, when viewed through this lens they appear as agents of
their own stories. The volume provides key insights into how
immigrant children in both states presented creative,
out-of-the-box, powerful solutions to the dilemmas that
anti-immigrant rhetoric and harsh immigration laws present. Through
art, they demonstrated a righteous indignation against societal
violence, dehumanization, and death as a tool for navigating a
racist, anti-immigrant society. When children are the agents of
their own stories, they can reimagine destructive situations in
ways that adults sometimes cannot, offering us alternatives and
hope for a better future. At once devastating and revelatory,
Drawing Deportation provides a roadmap for how art can provide a
safe and necessary space for vulnerable populations to assert their
humanity in a world that would rather divest them of it.
This book proposes an approach to Eurocentrism as a paradigm of
knowledge production and interpretation rooted in the Western
narrative of modernity and its racial governmentalities.
Accordingly, it interrogates the relationship between knowledge,
race, and power at the heart of debates on the making and
circulation of history, opening up a tension, not so much with
other histories, but with Eurocentrism's formulas of
self-assurance, and attempts to accommodate other narratives. The
book is an interdisciplinary endeavor that engages with diverse
political and academic contexts and debates that reveal
understandings of coloniality/modernity, specifically in education.
Education, and in particular history teaching, is approached as a
key arena in which to explore the (re)configuration of broader
political and academic discourses and silences on power and race.
Moving beyond discussions on national identity and the
multicultural curriculum, it critically examines textbooks in
Portugal and the discussions raised during empirical research with
actors from a wide variety of fields, such as academia, policy and
decision-making, schooling and the media. These are addressed in
relation to the international context that saw the consolidation of
global and regional organizations-such as UNESCO and the Council of
Europe-which established scientific knowledge as a key solution to
political conflicts (conventionally defined as exacerbated
nationalism, ethnocentrism and cultural misunderstandings). Central
to these discussions are the ideas of multiperspectivity and the
inclusion of content about the 'other', which are addressed in
detail through a case study on depictions of the African national
liberation movements. This book aims to contribute to the critique
of the contemporary workings of Eurocentrism and racism that have
frustrated the struggles for the decolonization of knowledge and
continue to shape our understandings of the world order in racially
hierarchical terms, by re-centering the West/Europe.
Illustrates how the children of immigrants use art to grapple with
issues of citizenship, state violence, and belonging Young
immigrant children often do not have the words to express how their
lives are shaped by issues of immigration, legal status, and
state-sanctioned violence. Yet they are able to communicate its
effects on them using art. Based on ten years of work with
immigrant children as young as six years old in Arizona and
California- and featuring an analysis of three hundred drawings,
theater performances, and family interviews-Silvia Rodriguez Vega
provides accounts of children's challenges with deportation and
family separation during the Obama and Trump administrations. While
much of the literature on immigrant children depicts them as
passive, when viewed through this lens they appear as agents of
their own stories. The volume provides key insights into how
immigrant children in both states presented creative,
out-of-the-box, powerful solutions to the dilemmas that
anti-immigrant rhetoric and harsh immigration laws present. Through
art, they demonstrated a righteous indignation against societal
violence, dehumanization, and death as a tool for navigating a
racist, anti-immigrant society. When children are the agents of
their own stories, they can reimagine destructive situations in
ways that adults sometimes cannot, offering us alternatives and
hope for a better future. At once devastating and revelatory,
Drawing Deportation provides a roadmap for how art can provide a
safe and necessary space for vulnerable populations to assert their
humanity in a world that would rather divest them of it.
I think, therefore I write. That could be the slogan of this guide
teaches writing based on the pragmatic, focusing
semantic-communicative, not from the grammar normative rules.
Pragmatic is the discipline that studies the language in its
relationship with users and the circumstances of the communication.
This manual suggests you practice the best strategies to develop
different types of documents, given that writing is to order and
contextualize the ideas that someone wants to explain in a process
written communication. Going against the traditional teaching,
supported by the normative grammar to teach writing, this guide
developing a strategy based on pragmatic semantics - communication,
offering an approach closer to the reality of speakers. Therefore
offers a different approach and very current, which teaches writing
through the principle of action-research.
E certo. Nunca estaremos sos. Seremos pelo menos sempre dois: o
leitor, com a sua imaginacao e a recriacao que faz dos poemas que
le, e o escritor. Por isso, traz as asas, que eu levo algumas
palavras. Encontro no sitio do costume...
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