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This text involves students in understanding and using the "tools"
of critical social and literary theory from the first day of class.
It is an ideal first introduction before students encounter more
difficult readings from critical and postmodern perspectives.
Nealon and Searls Giroux describe key concepts and illuminate each
with an engaging inquiry that asks students to consider deeper and
deeper questions. Written in students' own idiom, and drawing its
examples from the social world, literature, popular culture, and
advertising, The Theory Toolbox offers students the language and
opportunity to theorize rather than positioning them to respond to
theory as a reified history of various schools of thought. Clear
and engaging, it avoids facile description, inviting students to
struggle with ideas and the world by virtue of the book's
relentless challenge to common assumptions and its appeal to common
sense. Updated throughout, the second edition of The Theory Toolbox
includes a discussion of new media, as well as two new chapters on
life and nature.
Inquiring into the future of the university, Susan Giroux finds a
paradox at the heart of higher education in the post-civil rights
era. Although we think of "post-civil rights" as representing a
colorblind or race transcendent triumphalism in national political
discourse, Giroux argues that our present is shaped by persistent
"raceless" racism at home and permanent civilizational war abroad.
She sees the university as a primary battleground in this ongoing
struggle. As the heir to Enlightenment ideals of civic education,
the university should be the institution for the production of an
informed and reflective democratic citizenry responsible to and for
the civic health of the polity, a privileged site committed to free
and equal exchange in the interests of peaceful and democratic
coexistence. And yet, says Giroux, historically and currently the
university has failed and continues to fail in this role. Between
Race and Reason engages the work of diverse intellectuals-Friedrich
Nietzsche, W. E. B. Du Bois, Michel Foucault, Martin Luther King,
Jr., Jacques Derrida and others-who challenge the university's past
and present collusion with racism and violence. The book
complements recent work done on the politics of higher education
that has examined the consequences of university corporatization,
militarization, and bureaucratic rationalization by focusing on the
ways in which these elements of a broader neoliberal project are
also racially prompted and promoted. At the same time, it
undertakes to imagine how the university can be reconceived as a
uniquely privileged site for critique in the interests of today's
urgent imperatives for peace and justice.
Inquiring into the future of the university, Susan Giroux finds a
paradox at the heart of higher education in the post-civil rights
era. Although we think of "post-civil rights" as representing a
colorblind or race transcendent triumphalism in national political
discourse, Giroux argues that our present is shaped by persistent
"raceless" racism at home and permanent civilizational war abroad.
She sees the university as a primary battleground in this ongoing
struggle. As the heir to Enlightenment ideals of civic education,
the university should be the institution for the production of an
informed and reflective democratic citizenry responsible to and for
the civic health of the polity, a privileged site committed to free
and equal exchange in the interests of peaceful and democratic
coexistence. And yet, says Giroux, historically and currently the
university has failed and continues to fail in this role. Between
Race and Reason engages the work of diverse intellectuals-Friedrich
Nietzsche, W. E. B. Du Bois, Michel Foucault, Martin Luther King,
Jr., Jacques Derrida and others-who challenge the university's past
and present collusion with racism and violence. The book
complements recent work done on the politics of higher education
that has examined the consequences of university corporatization,
militarization, and bureaucratic rationalization by focusing on the
ways in which these elements of a broader neoliberal project are
also racially prompted and promoted. At the same time, it
undertakes to imagine how the university can be reconceived as a
uniquely privileged site for critique in the interests of today's
urgent imperatives for peace and justice.
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