The New Henry Giroux Reader presents Henry Giroux’s evolving body of work. The book articulates a crucial shift in his analyses after the September 11th, 2001 terrorist attack, when his writing took on more expansive articulations of power, politics, and pedagogy that addressed education and culture in forms that could no longer be contained via isolated reviews of media, schooling, or pedagogical practice. Instead, Giroux locates these discourses as a constellation of neoliberal influences on cultural practices, with education as the engine of their reproduction and their cessation.The New…mehr
The New Henry Giroux Reader presents Henry Giroux’s evolving body of work. The book articulates a crucial shift in his analyses after the September 11th, 2001 terrorist attack, when his writing took on more expansive articulations of power, politics, and pedagogy that addressed education and culture in forms that could no longer be contained via isolated reviews of media, schooling, or pedagogical practice. Instead, Giroux locates these discourses as a constellation of neoliberal influences on cultural practices, with education as the engine of their reproduction and their cessation.The New Henry Giroux Reader also takes up Giroux’s proclivity for using metaphors articulating death as the inevitable effect of neoliberalism and its invasion of cultural policy. Zombies, entropy, and violence permeate his work, coalescing around the central notion that market ideologies are anathema to human life. His early pieces signal an unnatural state of affairs seeping through the fabric of social life, and his work in cultural studies and public pedagogy signals the escalation of this unease across educative spaces.The next sections take up the fallout of 9/11 as an eruption of these horrific practices into all facets of human life, within traditional understandings of education and culture’s broader pedagogical imperatives. The book concludes with Giroux’s writings on education's vitalist capacity, demonstrating an unerring capacity for hope in the face of abject horror.
Jennifer A. Sandlin is an associate professor in the Justice and Social Inquiry Department in the School of Social Transformation at Arizona State University, where she teaches courses on consumption and education, popular culture and justice, and social and cultural pedagogy. Her research focuses on the intersections of education, learning, and consumption; as well as on the theory and practice of public pedagogy. She also investigates sites of public pedagogy and popular culture-based, informal, and social movement activism centered on “unlearning” consumerism. She is currently co-editor of Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy. Her work has been published in Journal of Consumer Culture, Adult Education Quarterly, Qualitative Inquiry, International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, Curriculum Inquiry, and Teachers College Record. She recently edited, with Jason Wallin, Paranoid Pedagogies (Palgrave, 2018); with Julie Garlen, Disney, Culture, and Curriculum (Routledge, 2016) and Teaching with Disney (Peter Lang, 2016); with Jake Burdick and Michael O’Malley, Problematizing Public Pedagogy (Routledge, 2014); with Brian Schultz and Jake Burdick, Handbook of Public Pedagogy (Routledge, 2010); and with Peter McLaren, Critical Pedagogies of Consumption (Routledge, 2010). Steven J. Burdick is an assistant professor of Curriculum Studies in the College of Education at Purdue University, where he teaches courses in curriculum theory, multicultural education, and qualitative inquiry. Jake’s research centers on deepening conceptualizations of education via public pedagogy and theorizing activism as a pedagogical performance. Jake is the co-editor of the Handbook of Public Pedagogy (Routledge), Complicated Conversations and Confirmed Commitments: Revitalizing Education for Democracy (Educators International Press), and Problematizing Public Pedagogy (Routledge). He has published work in Qualitative Inquiry, Curriculum Inquiry, Review of Research in Education, Review of Educational Research, and the Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments Foreword Antonia Darder PROLOGUE: Reflections on Henry Giroux's Life and Work Henry Giroux and the Enduring Spirit of Resistance Peter McLaren Knowing Henry Giroux Shirley R. Steinberg Radicalizing Hope: Public Intellectualism, the Vitalism of Education, and the Promise of Democracy William Ayers Introduction: The Work of Henry Giroux: Exposing An American Horror Story Jake Burdick and Jennifer A. Sandlin SECTION I: Social Theory and the Struggle for Pedagogies: Sociology of Education, Critical Pedagogy, and Border Pedagogy 1. Theories of Reproduction and Resistance in the New Sociology of Education: A Critical Analysis 2. Border Pedagogy in the Age of Postmodernism SECTION II: Culture as Pedagogy: Cultural Studies, Public Pedagogy, and the Politics of Popular Culture 3. Doing Cultural Studies: Youth and the Challenge of Pedagogy 4. Public Pedagogy and the Responsibility of Intellectuals: Youth, Littleton, and the Loss of Innocence 5. Breaking into the Movies: Pedagogy and the Politics of Film SECTION III: Neoliberalism and the Phantasmagoria of the Social: Post-9/11 Politics, the Decline of the Public Sphere, and the Decay of Humanity 6. Neoliberalism and the Disappearance of the Social in Ghost World 7. Education After Abu Ghraib: Revisiting Adorno's Politics of Education 8. The Terror of Neoliberalism: Rethinking the Significance of Cultural Politics 9. White Nationalism, Armed Culture and State Violence in the Age of Donald Trump SECTION IV: No Way Out: The Devouring of Higher Education 10. Vocationalizing Higher Education: Schooling and the Politics of Corporate Culture 11. Youth, Higher Education and the Crisis of Public Time: Educated Hope and the Possibility of a Democratic Future 12. The Militarization of U.S. Higher Education after 9/11 SECTION V: Radicalizing Hope: Public Intellectualism, The Vitalism of Education, and the Promise of Democracy 13. Democracy, Freedom, and Justice after September 11th: Rethinking the Role of Educators and the Politics of Schooling 14. Cultural Studies, Public Pedagogy, and the Responsibility of Intellectuals 15. Gated Intellectuals and Fortress America: Towards a Borderless Pedagogy in the Occupy Movement 16. Henry Giroux on Zombie Politics: Bill Moyers Interviews Henry Giroux 17. Charlottesville, Neo-Nazis and the Challenge to Higher Education 18. Gangster Capitalism and Nostalgic Authoritarianism in Trump's America Index About the Author, Editors, and Contributors
Acknowledgments Foreword Antonia Darder PROLOGUE: Reflections on Henry Giroux's Life and Work Henry Giroux and the Enduring Spirit of Resistance Peter McLaren Knowing Henry Giroux Shirley R. Steinberg Radicalizing Hope: Public Intellectualism, the Vitalism of Education, and the Promise of Democracy William Ayers Introduction: The Work of Henry Giroux: Exposing An American Horror Story Jake Burdick and Jennifer A. Sandlin SECTION I: Social Theory and the Struggle for Pedagogies: Sociology of Education, Critical Pedagogy, and Border Pedagogy 1. Theories of Reproduction and Resistance in the New Sociology of Education: A Critical Analysis 2. Border Pedagogy in the Age of Postmodernism SECTION II: Culture as Pedagogy: Cultural Studies, Public Pedagogy, and the Politics of Popular Culture 3. Doing Cultural Studies: Youth and the Challenge of Pedagogy 4. Public Pedagogy and the Responsibility of Intellectuals: Youth, Littleton, and the Loss of Innocence 5. Breaking into the Movies: Pedagogy and the Politics of Film SECTION III: Neoliberalism and the Phantasmagoria of the Social: Post-9/11 Politics, the Decline of the Public Sphere, and the Decay of Humanity 6. Neoliberalism and the Disappearance of the Social in Ghost World 7. Education After Abu Ghraib: Revisiting Adorno's Politics of Education 8. The Terror of Neoliberalism: Rethinking the Significance of Cultural Politics 9. White Nationalism, Armed Culture and State Violence in the Age of Donald Trump SECTION IV: No Way Out: The Devouring of Higher Education 10. Vocationalizing Higher Education: Schooling and the Politics of Corporate Culture 11. Youth, Higher Education and the Crisis of Public Time: Educated Hope and the Possibility of a Democratic Future 12. The Militarization of U.S. Higher Education after 9/11 SECTION V: Radicalizing Hope: Public Intellectualism, The Vitalism of Education, and the Promise of Democracy 13. Democracy, Freedom, and Justice after September 11th: Rethinking the Role of Educators and the Politics of Schooling 14. Cultural Studies, Public Pedagogy, and the Responsibility of Intellectuals 15. Gated Intellectuals and Fortress America: Towards a Borderless Pedagogy in the Occupy Movement 16. Henry Giroux on Zombie Politics: Bill Moyers Interviews Henry Giroux 17. Charlottesville, Neo-Nazis and the Challenge to Higher Education 18. Gangster Capitalism and Nostalgic Authoritarianism in Trump's America Index About the Author, Editors, and Contributors
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