Critical Pedagogies of Consumption - Jennifer A. Sandlin

Critical Pedagogies of Consumption

Living and Learning in the Shadow of the "Shopocalypse"

Jennifer A. Sandlin (Redaktør) ; Peter McLaren (Redaktør)

Explores consumption and its relation to learning, identity development, and education. This examines educational sites - both formal and informal - where learners and teachers are resisting consumerism and enacting a critical pedagogy of consumption. Les mer
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Vår pris: 827,-

(Paperback) Fri frakt!
Leveringstid: Sendes innen 21 dager

Explores consumption and its relation to learning, identity development, and education. This examines educational sites - both formal and informal - where learners and teachers are resisting consumerism and enacting a critical pedagogy of consumption.
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Forlag: Routledge
Innbinding: Paperback
Språk: Engelsk
Sider: 282
ISBN: 9780415997904
Format: 23 x 15 cm
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«

"Utopian in theme and implication, this book shows how the practices of critical, interpretive inquiry can help change the world in positive ways…. This is the promise, the hope, and the agenda that is offered."--Norman K. Denzin, From the Foreword

"Its focus on learning, education and pedagogy gives this book a particular relevance and significance in contemporary cultural studies. Its impressive authors, thoughtful structuring, wide range of perspectives, attention to matters of educational policy and practice, and suggestions for transformative pedagogy all provide for a compelling and significant volume."--H. Svi Shapiro, University of North Carolina–Greensboro

»

Chapter 1: Introduction: Exploring Consumption's Pedagogy and Envisioning a Critical Pedagogy of Consumption-Living and Learning in the Shadow of the "Shopocalypse," Jennifer A. Sandlin, Arizona State University and Peter McLaren, UCLA


Part I: Education, Consumption, and the Social, Economic, and Environmental Crises of Capitalism


Chapter 2: Rootlessness, Reenchantment and Educating Desire: A Brief History of the Pedagogy of Consumption, Michael Hoechsmann, McGill University, Montreal, Canada


Chapter 3: Consuming Learning, Robin Usher, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia


Chapter 4: Producing Crisis: Green Consumerism as an Ecopedagogical Issue, Richard Kahn, University of North Dakota


Chapter 5: Teaching Against Consumer Capitalism in the Age of Commercialization and Corporatization of Public Education, Ramin Farahmandpur, Portland State University


Part II: Schooling the Consumer Citizen


Chapter 6: Schooling for Consumption, Joel Spring, Queens College and Graduate Center, City University of New York


Chapter 7: Schools Inundated in a Marketing-Saturated World, Alex Molnar, Arizona State University, Faith Boninger, Arizona State University, Gary Wilkinson, University of Hull, England and Joseph Fogarty, Corballa National School, Sligo, Ireland and Chairperson of the Campaign for Commercial-Free Education


Chapter 8: Exploring the Privatized Dimension of Entrepreneurship Education and its Link to the Emergence of the College Student Entrepreneur, Matthew M. Mars, McGuire Center of Entrepreneurship, University of Arizona


Chapter 9: Framing Higher Education: Nostalgia, Entrepreneurship, Consumerism and Redemption, Gustavo E. Fischman, Arizona State University and Eric Haas, WestEd, Oakland, CA


Chapter 10: Politicizing Consumer Education: Conceptual Evolutions, Sue L. T. McGregor, Mount St. Vincent University, Halifax, Canada


Part III: Consumption, Popular Culture, Everyday Life, and the Education of Desire


Chapter 11: Consuming the All-American Corporate Burger: McDonald's "Does It All For You," Joe L. Kincheloe


Chapter 12: Barbie: The Bitch Can Buy Anything, Shirley R. Steinberg, McGill University, Montreal, Canada


Chapter 13: Consuming Skin: Dermographies of Female Subjection and Abjection, Jane Kenway, Monash University, Victoria, Australia and Elizabeth Bullen, Deakin University, Victoria, Australia


Chapter 14: Happy Cows and Passionate Beefscapes: Nature as Landscape and Lifestyle in Food Advertisements, Anne Marie Todd, San Jose State University


Chapter 15: Creating the Ethical Parent-Consumer Subject: Commerce, Moralities and Pedagogies in Early Parenthood, Lydia Martens, Keele University, UK


Chapter 16: Chocolate, Place, and a Pedagogy of Consumer Privilege, David A. Greenwood, Washington State University


Part IV: Unlearning Consumerism through Critical Pedagogies of Consumption: Sites of Contestation and Resistance


Chapter 17: Re-Imagining Consumption: Political and Creative Practices of Arts-Based Environmental Adult Education, Darlene E. Clover, University of Victoria, Canada and Katie Shaw, University of Victoria, Canada


Chapter 18: Using Cultural Production to Undermine Consumption: Paul Robeson as Radical Cultural Worker, Stephen D. Brookfield, University of St. Thomas, Minneapolis, MN


Chapter 19: Beyond the Culture Jam, Valerie Scatamburlo-D'Annibale, University of Windsor, Ontario, Canada


Chapter 20: Global Capitalism and Strategic Visual Pedagogy, David Darts, New York University and Kevin Tavin, The Ohio State University


Chapter 21: Turning America Into a Toy Store, Henry A. Giroux, McMaster University


Chapter 22: United We Consume? Artists Trash Consumer Culture and Corporate Green Washing, Nicolas Lampert, Visual Artist, JustSeeds Visual Resistance Artists' Cooperative


List of Contributors
Jennifer A. Sandlin is Assistant Professor in the Division of Advanced Studies in Education Policy, Leadership, and Curriculum, Mary Lou Fulton Institute and Graduate School of Education, Arizona State University, Tempe.





Peter McLaren is Professor in the Division of Urban Schooling, the Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, University of California, Los Angeles.