ABSTRACT

First Published in 2004. This work explores various forms of oppression that plague contemporary society. Through the analyses and reflections of theorists and social activists - including Paulo Freire himself - Politics of Liberation brings together, under a common project of human liberation, critical voices from around the globe: Mexico, Guatemala, Britain, Canada, Brazil, Argentina, Australia, New Zealand and the United States. The essays argue that Freire's work offers an avenue out of the malaise of contemporary politics and culture. They place Freire temporally in relation to moments of modernity and postmodernity; culturally and existentially in relation to the First and Third Worlds and at the standpoint of indigenous peoples; politically in terms of his attention to the range of sites and dimensions of oppression and their relatedness; and intellectually in relation to the eclectic range of theories on which he draws. The book is a response to the current global crisis of solidarity among progressive and dissident intellectuals, educators and cultural workers.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|21 pages

Critical thought and moral imagination

Marguerite and Michael Rivage-Seul

chapter 20|8 pages

Twenty years after Pedagogy of the Oppressed

Carlos Alberto Torres and Paulo Freire

chapter 11|23 pages

Postmodernism and the death of politics

Peter L McLaren