ABSTRACT

The essays in this collection address questions raised by a modernity that has become global with the victory of capitalism over its competitors in the late twentieth century. Rather than erase difference by converting all to European-American norms of modernity, capitalist modernity as it has gone global has empowered societies once condemned to imprisonment in premodernity or tradition to make their own claims on modernity, on the basis of those very traditions, as filtered through experiences of colonialism, neocolonialism, or simple marginalization by the forces of globalization. Global modernity appears presently not as global homogeneity, but as a site of conflict between forces of homogenization and heterogenization within and between nations. Prominent in this context are conflicts over different ways of knowing and organizing the world. The essays here, dealing for the most part with education in the United States, engage in critiques of hegemonic ways of knowing and critically evaluate counterhegemonic voices for change that are heard from a broad spectrum of social, ethnic, and indigenous perspectives. Crucial to the essays' critique of hegemony in contemporary pedagogy is an effort shared by the contributors, distinguished scholars in their various fields, to overcome area and/or disciplinary boundaries and take the wholeness of everyday life as their point of departure.

part |85 pages

Perspectives on Pedagogy

chapter |40 pages

Who Will Educate the Educators?

Critical Pedagogy in the Age of the New Imperialism

chapter |17 pages

Public Pedagogy and the Politics of Neoliberalism

Making the Political More Pedagogical

chapter |9 pages

How New is the World of the Internet?

Transnationalism, Technology, and Identity

part |75 pages

Our Ways of Knowing

chapter |23 pages

Anthropology, History, and Aboriginal Rights

Politics and the Rise of Ethnohistory in North America in the 1950s

chapter |19 pages

Ethnic Studies in the Age of the Prison-Industrial Complex

Reflections on “Freedom” and Capture, Praxis and Immobilization

chapter |8 pages

The Drug War Is the New Jim Crow

Legislating Black Educational Exclusion in the Post-Civil Rights Era

chapter |21 pages

Who Are You Rooting For?

Transnationalism, the World Cup, and War

part |109 pages

Counterknowledges

chapter |21 pages

Agreement Place Boundaries versus Separatist Borders and the Essential versus Essentialism

Implications from Indigenous Social Thought for Transcommunal Cooperation among Rooted Communities

chapter |30 pages

“Strategic Parochialism” and the Politics of Speaking Contexts

Philippine Insurgent Nationalism and Critical Discourse Formation in a Postcolonial Academy

chapter |16 pages

Why Spend a Lot of Time Dwelling on the Past?

Understanding Resistance to Contemporary Salmon Farming in Kwakwaka'wakw Territory

chapter |21 pages

Challenging Infallible Histories

A Miraculous Revival of Dead Indians

chapter |17 pages

California Colonial Histories

The Integration of Historical Documents, Native Oral Traditions, and Archaeology

part |39 pages

Education for Community

chapter |24 pages

Gandhi and the Social Scientists

Some Thoughts on the Categories of Dissent and Possible Futures