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E-raamat: Cultural Studies, Education, and Youth: Beyond Schools

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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jul-2011
  • Kirjastus: Lexington Books
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780739169308
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jul-2011
  • Kirjastus: Lexington Books
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780739169308

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Cultural Studies, Education, and Youth: Beyond Schools, edited by Benjamin Frymer, Matthew Carlin, and John Broughton, addresses the new cultural landscapes which increasingly "educate" our youth. With essays from both emerging and established scholars, the book explores the ways media and popular culture have a growing impact on our youth, their identities, and everyday lives. In our highly mediated world, the nature of education has been dramatically transformed and taken way beyond the walls of our schools. Identities are formed, values learned, and relationships developed in the worlds of pop culture and media spaces. Each author brings a different lens to the study of education beyond the classroom. From the re-emergence of Che Guevara to the effects of an increasingly virtual culture, this collection critically attends to the changing nature of education and the impact of culture in the lives of youth. Cultural Studies, Education, and Youth: Beyond Schools raises significant questions and offers important insights for teachers, youth, scholars, and practitioners, alike.

Arvustused

This important work asks crucial questions on the professional territorialization of education, and more importantly, what to do about it. The books contributors provide a lively and timely group of questions on the current state of education, where creativity is stifled in the name of practicality and institutionalized standardization is the norm. This book is a much needed reminder that the purpose of education itself is lost unless critical analysis and a cultural studies perspective help move education away from institutions, and back to an approach to humanities and social sciences that serve to foster independent thinking and crucial analysis in students. -- Brian Cogan, associate professor of communication arts at Molloy College and co-editor of Mosh the Polls: Youth Voters, Popular Culture an There are anthologies and there are intellectual interventions. The intervention by Frymer, Broughton, Carlin, and their international and interdisciplinary collaborators affirms the rightful place of cultural studies in the study of schooling. Scholars and students from all disciplines who read this book will experience an education worth the name. -- Zeus Leonardo, Editor of Critical Pedagogy and Race, California State University, Long Beach
Acknowledgments v
Introduction 1(14)
Benjamin Frymer
Matt Carlin
John Broughton
Identity/Subjectivity
1 Objects in the Mirror: Education, Cultural Studies, and the Function of Ideology
15(22)
K. Daniel Cho
2 Beyond the Culture Industry: Spatial Theory and Adorno's Non-Identity
37(16)
Justin Wilford
3 Liquid Identity: Cultural Exchange Between the Reader and the Text
53(20)
Nikolina Nedeljkov
Politics and Resistance
4 The Resurgence of the Image of Che: Spirituality, Innervation, and Mimesis
73(20)
Matt Carlin
5 Discourse and Media Spectacle in the Bush Administration: A Cultural Studies Analysis
93(34)
Douglas Kellner
6 To Interpose a Little Ease: Making Sense of Sport and Intellectual Labor in C.L.R. James' Beyond a Boundary and His Other Works
127(24)
Cameron McCarthy
Youth
7 Sacred Profanities: Youth Alienation, Popular Culture, and Spirituality---An Interview with Donna Gaines
151(14)
Benjamin Frymer
8 Constructions of Childhood
165(28)
Jason Wallin
9 Discourse in Virtual Culture
193(22)
Brian Friedberg
Gender/Sex
10 "Are We Going to Prom or to Hell?" a New Heroine Emerges Through the Domination Conflict
215(18)
Jessica Lee Hochman
11 Well Endowed with Meaning: Ethnicity and Masculinity in Teen Prostitution
233(22)
Rob Maitra
Pedagogy
12 The Pedagogical Unconscious: Rethinking Marxist Pedagogy through Louis Althusser and Fredric Jameson
255(18)
Tyson Lewis
13 Insiders and Outsiders: Using Representations of Teachers in the British Press to Understand Teacher Identity
273(20)
Emily Zemke
About the Authors 293(4)
Index 297
Benjamin Frymer is assistant professor of sociology in the Hutchins School of Liberal Studies, Sonoma State University. Matthew Carlin is visiting assistant professor of critical and visual studies at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn.John Broughton is associate professor of psychology and education at Teachers College, Columbia University.