Pedagogy And The Politics Of Hope
English


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About The Book

Henry A. Giroux is one of the most respected and well-known critical education scholars social critics and astute observers of popular culture in the modern world. For those who follow his considerably influential work in critical pedagogy and social criticism this first-ever collection of his classic writings augmented by a new essay is a must-have volume that reveals his evolution as a scholar. In it he takes on three major considerations central to pedagogy and schooling.The first section offers Giroux's most widely read theoretical critiques on the culture of positivism and technocratic rationality. He contends that by emphasizing the logic of science and rationality rather than taking a holistic worldview these approaches fail to take account of connections among social political and historical forces or to consider the importance of such connections for the process of schooling.In the second section Giroux expands the theoretical framework for conceptualizing and implementing his version of critical pedagogy. His theory of border pedagogy advocates a democratic public philosophy that embraces the notion of difference as part of a common struggle to extend the quality of public life. For Giroux a student must function as a border-crosser as a person moving in and out of physical cultural and social borders. He uses the popular medium of Hollywood film to show students how they might understand their own position as partly constructed within a dominant Eurocentric tradition and how power and authority relate to the wider society as well as to the classroom.In the last section Giroux explores a number of contemporary traditions and issues including modernism postmodernism and feminism and discusses the matter of cultural difference in the classroom. Finally in an essay written especially for this volume Giroux analyzes the assault on education and teachers as public intellectuals that began in the Reagan-Bush era and continues today.
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