Decolonizing the English Literary Curriculum
Herausgeber: Quayson, Ato; Mukherjee, Ankhi
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Decolonizing the English Literary Curriculum
Herausgeber: Quayson, Ato; Mukherjee, Ankhi
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An international team of leading scholars illustrate the necessity and advantages of reforming the English Literary Curriculum from specific decolonial perspectives in this book, using evidence-based arguments from classroom contexts, as well as establishing new critical agendas.
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An international team of leading scholars illustrate the necessity and advantages of reforming the English Literary Curriculum from specific decolonial perspectives in this book, using evidence-based arguments from classroom contexts, as well as establishing new critical agendas.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 542
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. November 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 790g
- ISBN-13: 9781009299961
- ISBN-10: 1009299964
- Artikelnr.: 68104838
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 542
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. November 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 790g
- ISBN-13: 9781009299961
- ISBN-10: 1009299964
- Artikelnr.: 68104838
Introduction Ankhi Mukherjee and Ato Quayson; Part I. Identities: 1.
Decolonizing the university Paul Giles; 2. Decolonizing the English
department in Ireland Joe Cleary; 3. First Peoples, Indigeneity and
teaching indigenous writing in Canada Margery Fee and Deanna Reder; 4.
Decolonising literary pedagogies in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand
Elizabeth McMahon; 5. Gender, sexualities and decolonial methodologies
Brinda Bose; 6. Black British literature decolonizing the curriculum Ankhi
Mukherjee; Part II. Methodologies: 7. Theories of anthologizing and
decolonization Aarthi Vadde; 8. Confabulation as decolonial pedagogy in
Singaporean literature Joanne Leow; 9. Marxism, postcolonialism and
decolonization of literary studies Stefan Helgesson; 10. Against
ethnography: on teaching minority literature Jeanne-Marie Jackson; 11.
Orality, experiential learning and a decolonizing African literature at the
university of Ghana Kwabena Opoku-Agyemang; 12. Vernacular English in the
classroom, a new geopolitics of the ground beneath our feet Akshya Saxena;
13. Reading for justice: on the pleasures and pitfalls of a decolonializing
pedagogy Ato Quayson; Part III. Interdisciplinarity and literary studies:
14. Literature, human rights law and the return of decolonization Joseph R.
Slaughter; 15. Decolonizing literary interpretation through disability
Christopher Krentz; 16. Decolonizing the Bible as literature Ronald
Charles; 17. Decolonizing literature: a history of medicine perspective
Sloan Mahone; Part IV. Canon Revisions: 18. Decolonizing the literary
curriculum of medieval studies Geraldine Heng; 19. The decolonial imaginary
of borderlands Shakespeare Katherine Gillen; 20. Decolonizing romantic
studies Nigel Leask; 21. Victorian studies and decolonization Nasser Mufti;
22. Decolonizing world literature Debjani Ganguly; 23. Decolonizing the
English lyric through diasporic women's poetry Sandeep Parmar; 24.
Postcolonial poetry and the decolonization of the curriculum Nathan
Suhr-Sytsma; 25. Decolonizing English literary study in the anglophone
Caribbean William Ghosh; 26. #RhodesMustFall and the reform of the
literature curriculum James Ogude.
Decolonizing the university Paul Giles; 2. Decolonizing the English
department in Ireland Joe Cleary; 3. First Peoples, Indigeneity and
teaching indigenous writing in Canada Margery Fee and Deanna Reder; 4.
Decolonising literary pedagogies in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand
Elizabeth McMahon; 5. Gender, sexualities and decolonial methodologies
Brinda Bose; 6. Black British literature decolonizing the curriculum Ankhi
Mukherjee; Part II. Methodologies: 7. Theories of anthologizing and
decolonization Aarthi Vadde; 8. Confabulation as decolonial pedagogy in
Singaporean literature Joanne Leow; 9. Marxism, postcolonialism and
decolonization of literary studies Stefan Helgesson; 10. Against
ethnography: on teaching minority literature Jeanne-Marie Jackson; 11.
Orality, experiential learning and a decolonizing African literature at the
university of Ghana Kwabena Opoku-Agyemang; 12. Vernacular English in the
classroom, a new geopolitics of the ground beneath our feet Akshya Saxena;
13. Reading for justice: on the pleasures and pitfalls of a decolonializing
pedagogy Ato Quayson; Part III. Interdisciplinarity and literary studies:
14. Literature, human rights law and the return of decolonization Joseph R.
Slaughter; 15. Decolonizing literary interpretation through disability
Christopher Krentz; 16. Decolonizing the Bible as literature Ronald
Charles; 17. Decolonizing literature: a history of medicine perspective
Sloan Mahone; Part IV. Canon Revisions: 18. Decolonizing the literary
curriculum of medieval studies Geraldine Heng; 19. The decolonial imaginary
of borderlands Shakespeare Katherine Gillen; 20. Decolonizing romantic
studies Nigel Leask; 21. Victorian studies and decolonization Nasser Mufti;
22. Decolonizing world literature Debjani Ganguly; 23. Decolonizing the
English lyric through diasporic women's poetry Sandeep Parmar; 24.
Postcolonial poetry and the decolonization of the curriculum Nathan
Suhr-Sytsma; 25. Decolonizing English literary study in the anglophone
Caribbean William Ghosh; 26. #RhodesMustFall and the reform of the
literature curriculum James Ogude.
Introduction Ankhi Mukherjee and Ato Quayson; Part I. Identities: 1.
Decolonizing the university Paul Giles; 2. Decolonizing the English
department in Ireland Joe Cleary; 3. First Peoples, Indigeneity and
teaching indigenous writing in Canada Margery Fee and Deanna Reder; 4.
Decolonising literary pedagogies in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand
Elizabeth McMahon; 5. Gender, sexualities and decolonial methodologies
Brinda Bose; 6. Black British literature decolonizing the curriculum Ankhi
Mukherjee; Part II. Methodologies: 7. Theories of anthologizing and
decolonization Aarthi Vadde; 8. Confabulation as decolonial pedagogy in
Singaporean literature Joanne Leow; 9. Marxism, postcolonialism and
decolonization of literary studies Stefan Helgesson; 10. Against
ethnography: on teaching minority literature Jeanne-Marie Jackson; 11.
Orality, experiential learning and a decolonizing African literature at the
university of Ghana Kwabena Opoku-Agyemang; 12. Vernacular English in the
classroom, a new geopolitics of the ground beneath our feet Akshya Saxena;
13. Reading for justice: on the pleasures and pitfalls of a decolonializing
pedagogy Ato Quayson; Part III. Interdisciplinarity and literary studies:
14. Literature, human rights law and the return of decolonization Joseph R.
Slaughter; 15. Decolonizing literary interpretation through disability
Christopher Krentz; 16. Decolonizing the Bible as literature Ronald
Charles; 17. Decolonizing literature: a history of medicine perspective
Sloan Mahone; Part IV. Canon Revisions: 18. Decolonizing the literary
curriculum of medieval studies Geraldine Heng; 19. The decolonial imaginary
of borderlands Shakespeare Katherine Gillen; 20. Decolonizing romantic
studies Nigel Leask; 21. Victorian studies and decolonization Nasser Mufti;
22. Decolonizing world literature Debjani Ganguly; 23. Decolonizing the
English lyric through diasporic women's poetry Sandeep Parmar; 24.
Postcolonial poetry and the decolonization of the curriculum Nathan
Suhr-Sytsma; 25. Decolonizing English literary study in the anglophone
Caribbean William Ghosh; 26. #RhodesMustFall and the reform of the
literature curriculum James Ogude.
Decolonizing the university Paul Giles; 2. Decolonizing the English
department in Ireland Joe Cleary; 3. First Peoples, Indigeneity and
teaching indigenous writing in Canada Margery Fee and Deanna Reder; 4.
Decolonising literary pedagogies in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand
Elizabeth McMahon; 5. Gender, sexualities and decolonial methodologies
Brinda Bose; 6. Black British literature decolonizing the curriculum Ankhi
Mukherjee; Part II. Methodologies: 7. Theories of anthologizing and
decolonization Aarthi Vadde; 8. Confabulation as decolonial pedagogy in
Singaporean literature Joanne Leow; 9. Marxism, postcolonialism and
decolonization of literary studies Stefan Helgesson; 10. Against
ethnography: on teaching minority literature Jeanne-Marie Jackson; 11.
Orality, experiential learning and a decolonizing African literature at the
university of Ghana Kwabena Opoku-Agyemang; 12. Vernacular English in the
classroom, a new geopolitics of the ground beneath our feet Akshya Saxena;
13. Reading for justice: on the pleasures and pitfalls of a decolonializing
pedagogy Ato Quayson; Part III. Interdisciplinarity and literary studies:
14. Literature, human rights law and the return of decolonization Joseph R.
Slaughter; 15. Decolonizing literary interpretation through disability
Christopher Krentz; 16. Decolonizing the Bible as literature Ronald
Charles; 17. Decolonizing literature: a history of medicine perspective
Sloan Mahone; Part IV. Canon Revisions: 18. Decolonizing the literary
curriculum of medieval studies Geraldine Heng; 19. The decolonial imaginary
of borderlands Shakespeare Katherine Gillen; 20. Decolonizing romantic
studies Nigel Leask; 21. Victorian studies and decolonization Nasser Mufti;
22. Decolonizing world literature Debjani Ganguly; 23. Decolonizing the
English lyric through diasporic women's poetry Sandeep Parmar; 24.
Postcolonial poetry and the decolonization of the curriculum Nathan
Suhr-Sytsma; 25. Decolonizing English literary study in the anglophone
Caribbean William Ghosh; 26. #RhodesMustFall and the reform of the
literature curriculum James Ogude.