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E-raamat: Teaching and Learning Difficult Histories in International Contexts: A Critical Sociocultural Approach

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Grounded in a critical sociocultural approach, this volume examines issues associated with teaching and learning difficult histories in international contexts. Defined as representations of past violence and oppression, difficult histories are contested and can evoke emotional, often painful, responses in the present. Teaching and learning these histories is contentious yet necessary for increased dialogue within conflict-ridden societies, reconciliation in post-conflict societies, and greater social cohesion in long-standing democratic nations. Focusing on locations and populations across the globe, chapter authors investigate how key themesincluding culture, identity, collective memory, emotion, and multi-perspectivity, historical consciousness, distance, and amnesiainform the teaching and learning of difficult histories.
List of Contributors
ix
Introduction 1(14)
Terrie Epstein
Carla L. Peck
SECTION 1 Re-Presentations of Difficult Histories
15(64)
1 Sustainable History Lessons for Post-Conflict Society
17(13)
Sirkka Ahonen
2 Teaching the War: Reflections on Popular Uses of Difficult Heritage
30(15)
Maria Grever
3 "Argue the Contrary for the Purpose of Getting a PhD": Revisionist Historians, the Singapore Government and the Operation Coldstore Controversy
45(14)
Loh Kah Seng
4 The State and the Volving of Teaching About Apartheid in School History in South Africa, Circa 1994-2016
59(20)
Johan Wassermann
Section 1 Commentary: Education-Between History and Memory
72(7)
Peter Seixas
SECTION 2 Teaching and Learning Indigenous Histories
79(64)
5 Teaching and Learning Difficult Histories: Australia
81(14)
Anna Clark
6 Pedagogies of Forgetting: Colonial Encounters and Nationhood at New Zealand's National Museum
95(14)
Joanna Kidman
7 "People Are Still Grieving": Maori and Non-Maori Adolescents' Perceptions of the Treaty of Waitangi
109(14)
Mark Sheehan
Terrie Epstein
Michael Harcourt
8 "That's Not My History": The Reconceptualization of Canadian History Education in Nova Scotia Schools
123(20)
Jennifer Tinkham
Section 2 Commentary
136(7)
Sirkka Ahonen
SECTION 3 Teachers and Teaching Difficult Histories
143(64)
9 "On Whose Side Are You?": Difficult Histories in the Israeli Context
145(15)
Tsafrir Goldberg
10 Teaching History and Educating for Citizenship: Allies or "Uneasy Bedfellows" in a Post-Conflict Context?
160(15)
Alan McCully
11 Teacher Understandings of Political Violence Represented in National Histories: The Trail of Tears Narrative
175(14)
Alan Stoskopf
Angela Bermudez
12 Teacher Resistance Towards Difficult Histories: The Centrality of Affect in Disrupting Teacher Learning
189(18)
Michalinos Zembylas
Section 3 Commentary
203(4)
Maria Grever
SECTION 4 History and Identity
207(46)
13 Physical and Symbolic Violence Imposed: The Difficult Histories of Lesbian, Gay and Trans-People
209(13)
J. B. Mayo, Jr.
14 Learning the "Burdening History": Challenges for History Education in Brazil
222(9)
Maria Auxiliadora Schmidt
15 Intersections of Students' Ethnic Identifications and Understandings of History
231(22)
Carla L. Peck
Section 4 Commentary
247(6)
Terrie Epstein
Index 253
Terrie Epstein is Professor of Education at Hunter College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, USA.

Carla L. Peck is Associate Professor of Social Studies Education in the Department of Elementary Education at the University of Alberta, Canada.