ABSTRACT

As the new administration moved beyond its first year in office, Obama's politics of hope increasingly has been transformed into a politics of accommodation. To many of his supporters, his quest for pragmatism and realism has become a weakness rather than a strength. By focusing on those areas where Obama grounded his own sense of possibility, Giroux critically investigates the well-being and future of young people, including the necessity to overcome racial injustices, the importance of abiding by the promise of a democracy to come, and the indisputable value of education in democracy. Giroux shows why considerations provide the ethical and political foundations for enabling hope to live up to its promises, while making civic responsibility and education central to a movement that takes democracy seriously.

part |16 pages

Introduction

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Barack Obama and the “Fierce Urgency of Now”

part |45 pages

Youth

chapter |7 pages

Hard Lessons

Neoliberalism, Education, and the Politics of Disposability

chapter |8 pages

Commodifying Kids

The Forgotten Crisis

chapter |9 pages

Ten Years After Columbine

The Deepening Tragedy of Youth

chapter |7 pages

Child Beauty Pageants

A scene from the “other America”

part |34 pages

Race

chapter |7 pages

Disposable Youth in a Suspect Society

A Challenge for the Obama Administration

chapter |6 pages

Locked Out and Locked Up

Youth Missing in Action from Obama's Stimulus Plan

chapter |6 pages

Judge Sonia Sotomayor and the New Racism

Getting Beyond the Politics of Denial

chapter |6 pages

Children of the Recession

Remembering Manchild in the Promised Land

part |35 pages

Democracy

chapter |6 pages

Beyond Bailouts

Education After Neoliberalism

chapter |6 pages

Educating Obama

A Task for Critical Pedagogy

chapter |5 pages

Beyond the Audacity of Hope

The Promise of an Educated Citizenry

chapter |8 pages

The Iranian Uprisings and the Challenge of the New Media

Rethinking the Politics of Representation

chapter |7 pages

Obama's Tortured Democracy

The Power of Images and the Politics of State Secrecy