This volume uncovers the colonial epistemologies that have long dominated the transfer of curriculum knowledge within and across nation-states and demonstrates how a historical approach to uncovering epistemological colonialism can inform an alternative, relational mode of knowledge transfer and negotiation within curriculum studies research and praxis.World leaders in the field of curriculum studies adopt a historical lens to map the negotiation, transfer, and confrontation of varied forms of cultural knowledge in curriculum studies and schooling. In doing so, they uniquely contextualize contemporary epistemes as historically embedded and politically produced and contest the unilateral logics of reason and thought which continue to dominate modern curriculum studies. Contesting the doxa of comparative reason, the politics of knowledge and identity, the making of twenty-first century educational subjects, and multiculturalism, this volume offers a relational onto-epistemic network as an alternative means to dissect and overcome epistemological colonialism.This text will benefit researchers, academics, and educators with an interest in curriculum studies as well as the study of international and comparative education. Those interested in post-colonial discourses and the philosophy of education will also benefit from the volume.
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This volume uncovers the colonial epistemologies which have long dominated the transfer of curriculum knowledge across nation states, and demonstrates how a historical approach to uncovering epistemological colonialism can inform an alternative, relational mode of knowledge transfer and negotiation within curriculum studies research.
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PART I Introduction1: Historicizing Curriculum Knowledge Translation and Onto-Epistemic ColonialityWeili Zhao, Thomas S. Popkewitz, and Tero AutioPART II Comparative Reason and Curriculum Studies 2: Making the Scientific Self: A Location-Less Logic with LocationsThomas S. Popkewitz 3: Itinerant Curriculum Theory: The "Heterotopian" Logic. Challenging Curriculum Involution, and OccidentosisJoão M. Paraskeva 4: Modernity, Colonialism, and Translation: Historicizing China’s "Science" Making through Western Discourses/EpistemesWeili Zhao and Yundan Zheng PART III Curriculum as Alchemies of Making Subjects and Knowledge 5: Technology of Self as Curriculum Knowledge: The Making of Confucian Subjects and Its Revisitation in Modern Korean Education Ji-Hye Kim 6: When Numbers Dictate Common Sense: Transnational’s Aspirations of a Global Curriculum Melissa Andrade-Molina 7: Curriculum History as History of the Present: Between the Alchemy of Knowledge and the Fabrication of SubjectsMarcia Serra Ferreira PART IV Curriculum Theory, and the Politics of Knowledge and Identity 8: Making Finnish Kinds of People: Curriculum Knowledge as an Amalgam of Science, Politics, and Secular Lutheranism in the Finnish Variant of Egalitarian Nordic Welfare Society Tero Autio 9: Epistemicide in Curriculum Studies?: The Erasure of the Feminine and Beauty/Imagination/Emotion/Body/Intuition/Aesthetics/ArtmakingDonald S. Blumenfeld-Jones 10: Weaving Threads that Gesture beyond Modern-Colonial Desires for Mastery, Progress, and UniversalityVanessa Andreotti PART V Multiculturalism as Curriculum Project and its Global Variations 11: Hybridization, Classification, and Transformations of Multiculturalism and Multicultural Education Jie Qi, Jiyoung Seo-Cense, and Shengping Zhang 12: Assembling Saudi Al-nahda through Saudi WomenJehan Abduljabbar and Jamie A. Kowalczyk13: Historicizing an Epistemic Struggle between Anglo-Eurocentrism and an Indigenous Analytic within the Australian CurriculumStephen Kelly
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780367339487
Publisert
2022-02-11
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Vekt
517 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
276

Om bidragsyterne

Weili Zhao is Professor of Curriculum Studies in the Jing Hengyi School of Edication at the Hangzhou Normal University, China.

Thomas S. Popkewitz is Professor in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States.

Tero Autio is Professor at the University of Tampere, Finland.