Throughout hooks' powerful life she envisioned, described, and enacted a radical, engaged pedagogy and praxis rooted in love, rather than power, while simultaneously modeling transgressive modes of being in the world. bell hooks' Radical Pedagogy is the first sustained collection of teachings and reflections that address the full scope of bell hooks' teaching trilogy. Organized into four parts covering: engaged pedagogies; pedagogies of hope and joy; pedagogies of the bodymindspirit; strategies of resistance and anticolonial frameworks, the book offers an accessible guide to hooks' work for…mehr
Throughout hooks' powerful life she envisioned, described, and enacted a radical, engaged pedagogy and praxis rooted in love, rather than power, while simultaneously modeling transgressive modes of being in the world. bell hooks' Radical Pedagogy is the first sustained collection of teachings and reflections that address the full scope of bell hooks' teaching trilogy. Organized into four parts covering: engaged pedagogies; pedagogies of hope and joy; pedagogies of the bodymindspirit; strategies of resistance and anticolonial frameworks, the book offers an accessible guide to hooks' work for students, teachers and researchers. The chapters examine how hooks' pedagogical framework resists antiblack, imperialist, white supremacist, capitalist, abled, and cisheteronormative patriarchal pedagogical praxes, while simultaneously calling for a deep and sustained commitment to the work of "educat[ing] people to heal this world into what it might become." The book brings together the work of educators who are making visionary interventions in their fields of study and in their local and regional communities. They include scholars and teachers affiliated with universities, schools across k-12 levels as well as community education cooperatives. The book includes a foreword by the feminist scholar Beverly Guy-Sheftall (Spellman College, USA) and the political philosopher Joy James (Williams College, USA).Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Megan Feifer is Teacher-Scholar in Residence at the bell hooks center at Berea College, USA. Maia L. Butler is Associate Professor of African American Literature at University of North Carolina Wilmington, USA. Joanna Davis-McElligatt is Assistant Professor of Black Literary and Cultural Studies and Affiliate Faculty in Women's, Gender, and LGBTQ Studies at the University of North Texas, USA.
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword: Beverly Guy-Sheftall (Spellman College USA) Introduction: Megan Feifer (Berea College USA) Maia L.Butler (University of North Carolina Wilmington USA) and Joanna Davis-McElligatt (University of North Texas USA) Part I: Engaged Pedagogies 1. Pedagogies of Care: Care Teams Meika Loe (Colgate University USA) 2. Death to PowerPoint Life to Relational Engaged Pedagogy Lauren Reid Judelysse Gomez Jack Wolcott Oluwanifemi Olugbemiga and Erin Hipple (West Chester University USA) 3. Doing Engaged Pedagogy within the Neoliberal University Jade CrimsonDa Costa (York University Canada) 4. Teaching bell hooks in Philosophy Hazel Biana (De La Salle University-Manila the Philippines) 5. Engaged Pedagogies in Virtual Learning Spaces: Students as Experimental Storytellers Desiree Self (Stony Brook University USA) 6. All about bell: Foregrounding bell hooks in the Classroom as Engaged Pedagogy Megan Feifer (Berea College USA) Part II. Pedagogies of Hope and Joy 7. Leaning Into Discomfort: Grounding our Identities as Teacher-Learners to Confront Difficult Emotions and Build a "Pedagogy of Hope by Jasjit Sangha and Kosha D. Bramesfeld (University of Toronto Canada) 8. Transgressive Transformative Feminist Pedagogies: Education for Healing and Hope Patti Duncan (Oregon State University USA) 9. Doors to the Future: Hope Survival and Futurism as Creation by Bunny McFadden (Independent Scholar USA) 10. Grappling and Growing through Stories of Hope and Sorrow by Jennifer Mann Caitlin M. Donovan Katie B. Peachey and Crystal Chen Lee (Duke University USA) 11. Rethinking the Classroom as a Hub for Intellectual Joy and Scholastic Passion: A Dialogue Laiba Rizwan Melanie Toledo and Kosha D. Bramesfeld (University of Toronto Canada) Part III. Pedagogies of the Bodymindspirit 12. Flirting with Self-Exile: The Dismissive Commonsense of Academic 'Belonging Marlaina Martin (University of Maryland USA) 13.Soul of the Syllabus by Dr. Rev. Natalie Coe (University of North Carolina Wilmington USA) 14. Telling the Self: hooks's 'Exceptionalism and Experience' in the Black Literature Classroom Nicole Spigner (Northwestern University USA) 15. Holistic Pedagogies: (Re)membering the Bodymindspirit Joanna Davis-McElligatt (University of North Texas USA) 16. Spiritually engaged social justice pedagogy in the writing classroom and beyond: A narrative legacy of bell hooks Rachel Panton (Nova Southeastern University USA) Part IV. Strategies of Resistance and Anticolonial Frameworks 17. Zapotec Feminist Pedagogical Practices: Building Collaborative Spaces for Learning Nancy Morales (Ithaca College USA) 18. Creating Critical Pedagogy Communities: The bell hooks Teaching Trilogy Reading Circle as Model of Cultivating Engaged Pedagogical Praxes Savannah Geidel and Maia Butler (Berea College USA) 19. Latinidad Community & Culture: The 'Tertulia & Hermandx Workshop' as a Case Study of Critical Classroom Praxis and Emancipatory Pedagogy Alyssa Garcia Margarita Mojica (Glenview Middle School USA) 20. Engaged Pedagogy through Community Writing in the Face of Neoliberal Education " Charles McMartin Maxwell Irving Charisse Iglesias and Nicole Crevar (University of Arizona USA) Afterword: Joy James (Williams College USA) References Index
Foreword: Beverly Guy-Sheftall (Spellman College USA) Introduction: Megan Feifer (Berea College USA) Maia L.Butler (University of North Carolina Wilmington USA) and Joanna Davis-McElligatt (University of North Texas USA) Part I: Engaged Pedagogies 1. Pedagogies of Care: Care Teams Meika Loe (Colgate University USA) 2. Death to PowerPoint Life to Relational Engaged Pedagogy Lauren Reid Judelysse Gomez Jack Wolcott Oluwanifemi Olugbemiga and Erin Hipple (West Chester University USA) 3. Doing Engaged Pedagogy within the Neoliberal University Jade CrimsonDa Costa (York University Canada) 4. Teaching bell hooks in Philosophy Hazel Biana (De La Salle University-Manila the Philippines) 5. Engaged Pedagogies in Virtual Learning Spaces: Students as Experimental Storytellers Desiree Self (Stony Brook University USA) 6. All about bell: Foregrounding bell hooks in the Classroom as Engaged Pedagogy Megan Feifer (Berea College USA) Part II. Pedagogies of Hope and Joy 7. Leaning Into Discomfort: Grounding our Identities as Teacher-Learners to Confront Difficult Emotions and Build a "Pedagogy of Hope by Jasjit Sangha and Kosha D. Bramesfeld (University of Toronto Canada) 8. Transgressive Transformative Feminist Pedagogies: Education for Healing and Hope Patti Duncan (Oregon State University USA) 9. Doors to the Future: Hope Survival and Futurism as Creation by Bunny McFadden (Independent Scholar USA) 10. Grappling and Growing through Stories of Hope and Sorrow by Jennifer Mann Caitlin M. Donovan Katie B. Peachey and Crystal Chen Lee (Duke University USA) 11. Rethinking the Classroom as a Hub for Intellectual Joy and Scholastic Passion: A Dialogue Laiba Rizwan Melanie Toledo and Kosha D. Bramesfeld (University of Toronto Canada) Part III. Pedagogies of the Bodymindspirit 12. Flirting with Self-Exile: The Dismissive Commonsense of Academic 'Belonging Marlaina Martin (University of Maryland USA) 13.Soul of the Syllabus by Dr. Rev. Natalie Coe (University of North Carolina Wilmington USA) 14. Telling the Self: hooks's 'Exceptionalism and Experience' in the Black Literature Classroom Nicole Spigner (Northwestern University USA) 15. Holistic Pedagogies: (Re)membering the Bodymindspirit Joanna Davis-McElligatt (University of North Texas USA) 16. Spiritually engaged social justice pedagogy in the writing classroom and beyond: A narrative legacy of bell hooks Rachel Panton (Nova Southeastern University USA) Part IV. Strategies of Resistance and Anticolonial Frameworks 17. Zapotec Feminist Pedagogical Practices: Building Collaborative Spaces for Learning Nancy Morales (Ithaca College USA) 18. Creating Critical Pedagogy Communities: The bell hooks Teaching Trilogy Reading Circle as Model of Cultivating Engaged Pedagogical Praxes Savannah Geidel and Maia Butler (Berea College USA) 19. Latinidad Community & Culture: The 'Tertulia & Hermandx Workshop' as a Case Study of Critical Classroom Praxis and Emancipatory Pedagogy Alyssa Garcia Margarita Mojica (Glenview Middle School USA) 20. Engaged Pedagogy through Community Writing in the Face of Neoliberal Education " Charles McMartin Maxwell Irving Charisse Iglesias and Nicole Crevar (University of Arizona USA) Afterword: Joy James (Williams College USA) References Index
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