Shirley R. Steinberg & Barry Down 
The SAGE Handbook of Critical Pedagogies [EPUB ebook] 

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**Winner of a 2022 American Educational Studies Association Critics′ Choice Book Award**

This extensive Handbook brings together different aspects of critical pedagogy in order to open up a clear international conversation on the subject, as well as pushing the boundaries of current understanding by extending the notion of a pedagogy to multiple pedagogies and perspectives. Bringing together contributing authors from around the globe, chapters provide a unique approach and insight to the discipline by crossing a range of disciplines and articulating common philosophical and social themes. Chapters are organised across three volumes and twelve core thematic sections:


Part 1: Social Theories of Critical Pedagogy 


Part 2: Seminal Figures in Critical Pedagogy 


Part 3: Transnational Perspectives and Critical Pedagogy


Part 4: Indigenous Perspectives and Critical Pedagogy


Part 5: On Education 


Part 6: In Classrooms 


Part 7: Critical Community Praxis


Part 8: Reading Critical Pedagogy, Reading Paulo Freire


Part 9: Communication, Media and Popular Culture 


Part 10: Arts and Aesthetics


Part 11: Critical Youth Pedagogies 


Part 12: Technoscience, Ecology and Wellness  


The SAGE Handbook of Critical Pedagogies is  an essential benchmark publication for advanced students, researchers and practitioners across a wide range of disciplines including education, health, sociology, anthropology and development studies

€399.99
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Tabella dei contenuti

Volume 1

Introduction to the Handbook – Barry Down & Shirley R. Steinberg

Section 1: Reading Paulo Freire

Section 1 Introduction – Shirley R. Steinberg

Chapter 1: The Importance of the Act of Reading – Paulo Freire

Chapter 2: Linking My Word to the World – Lilia I. Bartolomé

Chapter 3: Freire Contra Freire: An Interplay in Three Acts – John Willinsky

Chapter 4: A Note on Free Association as Transference to Reading – Deborah Britzman

Chapter 5: Dialogic and Liberating Actions – Ramón Flecha

Chapter 6: In the Spirit of Freire – William H. Schubert

Chapter 7: Fake News and Other Conundrums in ′Reading the World′ at Empire′s End – David Geoffrey Smith

Chapter 8: Inspiring and Emboldening – Hermán S. García

Chapter 9: In Gratitude – Marcella Runell Hall

Chapter10: Of Word, World, and Being (Online) – Arlo Kempf

Chapter 11: The Critical Redneck Experience: ‘How can anybody know/How they got to be this way?’ – Paul L. Thomas

Chapter 12: On Learning to Claim Text – Christine E. Sleeter

Chapter 13: ‘I Am a Revolutionary!’ – William Ayers

Chapter 14: The Importance of Paulo Freire in Act of Reading – Luis Huerta-Charles

Chapter 15: Share and Sustain – D′Arcy Martin

Section 2: Social Theories

Section 2 Introduction – Paul Carr & Gina Thésée

Chapter 16: Critical Pedagogy and the Knowledge Wars of the Twenty-First Century – Joe L. Kincheloe

Chapter 17: The Frankfurt School and Education – Benjamin Frymer

Chapter 18: The Nomad, The Hybrid: Deconstructing the Notion of Subjectivity through Freire and Rumi – Soudeh Oladi

Chapter 19: The Reader, the Text, the Restraints: A Cultural History of the Art(s) of Reading – Philip M. Anderson

Chapter 20: Deleuzeguattarian Concepts for a Becoming Critical Pedagogy – Rodney Handelsman

Chapter 21: Spectres of Critical Pedagogy: Must We Die in Order to Survive? – Antonio Garcia

Chapter 22: Critical Pedagogy Beyond the Human – Nathan Snaza

Chapter 23: Intersecting Critical Pedagogies to Counter Coloniality – Cathryn Teasley & Alana Butler

Chapter 24: Locating Black Life within Colonial Modernity: Decolonial Notes – Marlon Simmons

Chapter 25: Critical Pedagogy and Difference – Peter Pericles Trifonas

Chapter 26: Critical Pedagogy Imperiled: As Neoliberalism, Marketization, and Audit Culture Become the Academy – Marc Spooner

Chapter 27: Critical Pedagogy: Negotiating the Nuances of Implementation – Jane Mc Lean

Chapter 28: Critical Pedagogies of Compassion – Michalinos Zembylas

Section 3: Key Figures in Critical Pedagogy

Section 3 Introduction – Gregory Martin

Chapter 29: Critical Pedagogues: Paulo Freire and the North American Context – James D. Kirylo

Chapter 30: Gramscian Critical Pedagogy – Robert F. Carley

Chapter 31: Still Teaching to Transgress: Reflecting with bell hooks – Stephanie Troutman

Chapter 32: Ivan Illich and Liberation Theology – Samuel D. Rocha & Martha Sañudo

Chapter 33: From South African Black Theology and Freire to teaching for resistance: The work of Basil Moore – Robert Hattam

Chapter 34: Critical Pedagogy in Spain Through Life and Literature: Jurjo Torres Santomé & Ramón Flecha – Gresilda Tilley-Lubbs

Chapter 35: Interviews with Marta Soler and Teresa Sordé Martí – Marta Soler & Teresa Sordé Martí

Chapter 36: In Conversation with Henry Giroux – Graham Jeffery & Diarmuid Mc Auliffe

Chapter 37: Interviews with Joe Kincheloe and Peter Mc Laren – Joe L. Kincheloe & Peter Mc Laren

Chapter 38: Influenced by Critical Pedagogy: Interviews with Critical Friends – Shirley R. Steinberg

Section 4: Global Perspectives

Section 4 Introduction – Cathryn Teasley

Chapter 39: From Theory to Practice: The Identikit and Purpose of Critical Pedagogy – Domenica Maviglia

Chapter 40: Reimagining the University as a Transit Place and Space: A Contribution to the Decolonialisation Debate – Colin Chasi & Ylva Rodny-Gumede

Chapter 41: When I Open My Alas: Developing a Transnational Mariposa Consciousness – Juan Ríos Vega

Chapter 42: Critical Pedagogy and the Acceptance of Refugees in Greece – Aristotelis Gkiolmas, Constantina Stefanidou, & Constantine Skordoulis

Chapter 43: Critical Pedagogy in Underserved Environments in India – Madhulika Sagaram

Chapter 44: (Dis)ruptive Glocality Through Teacher Exchange in a Chilean Context – Kenneth J. Fasching-Varner, Michaela P. Stone, & Marco Montalbetti Viñuela

Chapter 45: A Return to the Heart of Darkness in a Neoliberal and Neoimperialist World – Brian Dotts

Chapter 46: Teaching Global Affairs: Problem Posing Education and the Violence of Indifference – Kathalene Razzano

Chapter 47: Promoting Critical Consciousness in the Preparation of Teachers in Colombia – Jaime Usma, Oscar Peláezm Yuliana Palaciom, & Catalina Jaramillo

Chapter 48: Vietnamese Students and the Emerging Model Minority Myth in Germany – Nicholas D. Hartlep & Pipo Bui

Chapter 49: Revisiting Hurricane Katrina: Racist Violence and the Biopolitics of Disposability – Henry Giroux

Volume 2

Section 5: Indigenous Ways of Knowing

Section 5 Introduction – Four Arrows & R. Michael Fisher

Chapter 50: Indigenizing Conscientization and Critical Pedagogy: Integration Nature, Spirit and Fearlessness as Foundational Concepts – R. Michael Fisher & Four Arrows

Chapter 51: A Critical, Culturally Sustaining, Pedagogy of Whanau – Ann Milne

Chapter 52: Critical Indigenous Pedagogies of Resistance: The Call for Critical Indigenous Educators – Jeremy Garcia

Chapter 53: Ethical Relationality as a Pathway for Non-Indigenous Educators to Decolonize Curriculum and Instruction – Shashi Shergill & David Scott

Chapter 54: Flooded: Between Two Worlds – Jennifer M. Markides

Chapter 55: Dance and Children′s Cultural Identity: A Critical Perspective of the Embodiment of Place – Adrienne Sansom

Chapter 56: Indigenous Knowledges and Science Education: Complexities, Considerations, and Praxis – Renee Desmarchelier

Chapter 57: Navajo Sweat House Leadership: Acquiring Traditional Navajo Leadership for Restoring Identity in our Forgotten World – Perry R. James

Chapter 58: The Navigators′ Path: Journey Through Story and Ngakau Pedagogy – Rose Marsters

Section 6: Education and Praxis

Section 6 Introduction – Robert Hattam

Chapter 59: A Critical Pedagogy of Working Class Schooling: A Call to Activist Theory and Practice – John Smyth

Chapter 60: Critical Pedagogy as Research – Tricia M. Kress

Chapter 61: Poverty and Equality in Early Childhood Education – Concepción Sánchez-Blanco

Chapter 62: Critical Tourism Pedagogy: A Response to Oppressive Practices – Sandro Carnicelli-Filho & Karla Boluk

Chapter 63: Queer(ing) Cisgender Normativity: Reconsidering Critical Pedagogy Through a Genderqueer Lens – Dana Stachowiak & Leila Villaverde

Chapter 64: Culturally Responsive Schooling as a Form of Critical Pedagogies for Indigenous Youth and Tribal Nations – Angelina E. Castagno, Jessica A. Solyom, & Bryan Brayboy

Chapter 65: Feminist Critical Pedagogy – Haggith Gor Ziv

Chapter 66: Schooling, Milieu, Racism: Just another brick in the wall – Teresa Fowler

Chapter 67: An Existentialist Pedagogy of Humanization – Sheryl Lieb

Chapter 68: Vocational Education and Training in Schools and ′really useful knowledge′ – Barry Down

Section 7: Teaching and Learning

Section 7 Introduction – Barry Down

Chapter 69: Critical Pedagogy, Social Justice, and Contesting Definitions of Engagement in the Classroom – David Zyngier

Chapter 70: Anti-Muslim Racism Education: Insights from the UK – Khadija Mohammed, L. Mc Auliffe, & N. Riaz

Chapter 71: Pedagogy of Connectedness – Revital Zilonka

Chapter 72: Counternarratives: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy and Critical Caring in One Urban School – Gang Zhu & Zhengmei Peng

Chapter 73: Leveraging the Overlapping Intersections of Disability Studies and Critical Pedagogy – Phillip Boda

Chapter 74: An Agenda for a Plurilingual Reality of Superdiversity – Guofang Li & Pramod K. Sah

Chapter 75: Teaching Social Justice – Galia Zalmanson Levi

Chapter 76: Creating Global Learning Communities – Ramón Flecha & Silvia Molina

Section 8: Communities and Activism

Section 8 Introduction – Michael B. Mac Donald

Chapter 77: Moving from Individual Consciousness Raising to Critical Community Building Praxis – Silvia Cristina Bettez & Cristina Maria Dominguez

Chapter 78: Arab Spring as Critical Pedagogy: Activism in the Face of Death – Awad Ibrahim

Chapter 79: Schools as Learning Communities – Maria Padrós & Sandra Girbés-Peco

Chapter 80: Love Unconditionally: Educating People in the Midst of a Social Crisis – Elbert J. Hawkins III

Chapter 81: Afrocentric Pedagogies for Raising Consciousness – Shuntay Z. Tarver & Melanie M. Acosta

Chapter 82: Critical Pedagogy, Democratic Praxis and Adultism – Toby Rollo, J. Cynthia Mc Dermott, Richard Kahn and Fred Chapel

Chapter 83: Presence and Resilience as Resistance – Tanya Brown Merriman

Chapter 84: African American Mothers Theorizing Practice – April Yaisa Ruffin-Adams

Chapter 85: Deploying Critical Bricolage as Activism – Sherilyn Lennon

Chapter 86: Critical Community Education: The Case of Love Strings – Annette Coburn & David Wallace

Volume 3

Section 9 Communication and Media

Section 9 Introduction – Michael Hoechsmann

Chapter 87: Mediating the Curriculum with Critical Media Literacy – Jeff Share

Chapter 88: Empowerment and Participation in Media Education: A Critical Review – Michael Hoechsmann & Alfonso Gutiérrez Martín

Chapter 89: Dangerous Citizenship: Comics and Critical Pedagogy – Sabrina Boyer

Chapter 90: It′s Reel Critical: Media Literacy and Film-Based Pedagogies – Brian C. Johnson

Chapter 91: Critical Media Literacy – Tony Kashani

Chapter 92: Critical Pedagogy and Wikilearning – Juha Suoranta

Chapter 93: Diversity in Digital Humanities – Cherie Ann Turpin

Chapter 94: Missing Beats: Critical Media Literacy Pedagogy in Post-secondary Media Production Programs – Ki Wight

Chapter 95: A Shock to Thought: Curatorial Judgement and the Public Exhibition of ‘Difficult Knowledge’ – Roger I. Simon

Chapter 96: In a rape culture, can boys actually be boys? – Gerald Walton

Section 10: Arts and Aesthetics

Section 10 Introduction – Leila Villaverde & Roymieco Carter

Chapter 97: Critical Public Pedagogies of DYI – Gregory Martin

Chapter 98: Oasis – (Re)conecptualizing Galleries as Intentionally Pedagogical – Leila Villaverde & Roymieco Carter

Chapter 99: Poverty is Two Coins: Using Children′s Literature and Art to Explore Global Social Justice – Judith Dunkerly-Bean & Kristine Sunday

Chapter 100: Performance Pedagogy Using the Theater of Justice – I. Malik Saafir

Chapter 101: Thanks for Being Local: Cine Musicking as a Critical Pedagogy of Popular Music – Michael B. Mac Donald

Chapter 102: Critical Life Writing for Social Change – Claire Robson & Dennis Sumara

Chapter 103: Towards a Critical Arts Practice – Peter R. Wright

Chapter 104: Transformative Arts and Culture Praxis Circle – Mary Drinkwater

Chapter 105: Through a Rhizomatic Lens – Lalenja Harrington

Chapter 106: The Pedagogical Afterthought: Situating Socially-engaged Art as Critical Public Pedagogy – Christopher Lee Kennedy

Section 11: Critical Youth Studies

Section 11 Introduction – Shirley R. Steinberg

Chapter 107: Resisting Youth: From Occupy Through Black Lives Matter to the Trump Resistance – Douglas Kellner & Roslyn M. Satchel

Chapter 108: Where Does Critical Pedagogy Happen? Youth, Relational Pedagogy and the Interstitial Spaces of School – Andrew Hickey

Chapter 109: Lyrical Minded: Unveiling the Hidden Literacies of Youth through Performance Pedagogy – Priya Parmar

Chapter 110: They Laugh ′Cause They Assume I′m in Prison: Hip Hop Feminism as Critical Pedagogy – Dawn N. Hicks Tafari & Veronica A. Newton

Chapter 111: Youth, Agency and the Paradox of Trust – Tony Edwards & Kerry J. Renwick

Chapter 112: Excavating Intimacy, Privacy, and Consent as Youth in a Hostile World – Paul L. Thomas

Chapter 113: Art and Erotic Exploration as Critical Pedagogy with Youth – Nwachi Tafari

Chapter 114: Youth, Becoming-American, and Learning the Vietnam War – Mark Helmsing

Chapter 115: The Bully, the Bullied, and the Boss: The Power Triangle of Youth Suicide – Teresa J. Rishel

Chapter 116: Pedagogies of Trauma, Fear and Hope in Texts about 9/11 for Young People: From a Perspective of Distance – Jo Lampert & Kerry Mallan

Section 12: Science, Ecology and Wellbeing

Section 12 Introduction – Renee Desmarchelier

Chapter 117: Feminist Readings of Bodies in Technoscience – Stephanie Leo Hudson

Chapter 118: Computer Science Education and the Role of Critical Pedagogy in a Digital World – Joseph Carroll-Miranda

Chapter 119: Where the Fantastic Liberates the Mundane: Feminist Science Fiction and the Imagination – Sarah E. Colonna

Chapter 120: Conceptualizing Hip Hop as a Conduit toward Developing Science Geniuses – Edmund Adjapong

Chapter 121: The Crit-Trans Heuristic for Criticalizing STEM Education: Youth and Educators as Participants in the World – Jennifer D. Adams, Atasi Das, & Eun-Ji Amy Kim

Chapter 122: Who Hears My Cry? The Impact of Activism on the Mental Health of African American Women – Shawn Arango Ricks

Chapter 123: Fat Pedagogy and the Disruption of Weight-Based Oppression: Toward the Flourishing of All Bodies – Constance Russell

Chapter 124: Forwarding a Critical Environmental Pedagogy – Marissa Bellino

Chapter 125: An Ecological Pedagogy of Joy – Jodi Latremouille

Circa l’autore

Barry Down is Professor of Education at Murdoch University, Perth, Western Australia. He commenced his teaching career in secondary schools before joining Edith Cowan University, South West Campus as a lecturer in social studies education. During this time, he held a number of administrative positions as Head of School and Associate Dean. In 2003 he joined Murdoch University as a foundation staff member at the Rockingham regional campus. Shortly afterwards, he was appointed the City of Rockingham Chair in Education (2004-2013), the first such position funded by a local government in Australia. In this period, he worked on a number of Australian Research Council (ARC) Linkage Projects investigating issues of student dis/engagement, school-to-work transitions, early career teacher resilience and the performance arts. He has co-authored seven books (with long time collaborators John Smyth and Peter Mc Inerney) including Critically Engaged Learning: Connecting to Young Lives (2008); ‘Hanging in With Kids’ in Tough Times: Engagement in Contexts of Educational Disadvantage in the Relational School (2012); and The Socially Just School; Making space for youth to speak back (2014). His most recent book is entitled Rethinking school-to-work transitions: Young people have something to say (with John Smyth and Janean Robinson). His research interests focus on young people’s lives in the context of shifts in the global economy, poverty, class, school-to-work transitions and student dis/re/engagement.  
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Lingua Inglese ● Formato EPUB ● Pagine 1752 ● ISBN 9781526486479 ● Dimensione 22.0 MB ● Editore Shirley R. Steinberg & Barry Down ● Casa editrice SAGE Publications ● Città London ● Paese GB ● Pubblicato 2020 ● Edizione 1 ● Scaricabile 24 mesi ● Moneta EUR ● ID 8122355 ● Protezione dalla copia Adobe DRM
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