English Language Arts as an Emancipatory Subject explores the changing nature and history of the English Language as an emancipatory subject, as well as how its current activities and projects address and challenge inequalities. Various forms of critical literacy have established English teaching as a radical force for social justice and subversion. However, the expert contributors to this book question whether English is a force for good in its capacity to develop literate citizens, or, are there larger contemporary complications surrounding it? This book will re-examine the history of English, its present quality as a classroom subject and its future potential to re-establish itself as an agent of social equality and change. Edited by internationally leading scholars from the UK, USA and Australia with contributions from New Zealand and Canada, this work will also inspire English teachers to view their subject as one through which positive differences are imagined, and complex real-life issues are debated and challenged in the classroom. The volume is an excellent overview of research and the latest thinking about the nature of English as an emancipatory subject, its distinguished history and its potential for the future. It will be a key resource for the research and teacher-education community, English teachers, student teachers, and anyone who views English teaching as a catalyst of social change.
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English Language Arts as an Emancipatory Subject explores the changing nature and history of the English Language as an emancipatory subject, as well as how its current activities and projects address and challenge inequalities.
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Part I: Establishing English as an Emancipatory Subject1. Knowing the Subject, Knowing its History: Examining Key Figures in English who Contributed to its Emancipatory Nature2. English as an Emancipatory Subject in England: A Historical Perspective, 1875-20243. English Teaching for Democratic Futures: The Role of Language, Literacy and Literature in Developing Creative and Critical Thinkers4. The English Language Emerging as an Identity for Migrants and Refugees5. Describing the World with Our Students in it: ELA and the Power of ‘Recognition’Part II: Reconfiguring the Curriculum of Emancipatory English6. Teaching English to Nurture Social Imagination in the Early Years of Schooling: Emancipation versus Constraints7. English, Literature and Questions of Emancipation: What does Literature Offer?8. Equality, Diversity and Inclusion through Children’s Literature in Higher Education9. Making English Good and Right: Curriculum Reform in Aotearoa New Zealand10. The Power of English Within and For the Lives of Migrant and Refugee Students11. Rurality, Writing and English: Spatial Justice for Rural Students through English Teaching and Writing Pedagogy12. Transitioning from Critical Literacy to the EcocriticalPart III: Emancipatory English in Practice13. Cultivating Critical Thinking Through Canonical and Non-Canonical Texts: Using a Social Justice Framework to Shape Curriculum and Instruction14. Applying Country-Centred Place Pedagogies to Include All Learners in English15. The Dignity of Choice: Independent Reading’s Emancipatory Potential as an Instructional Practice16. Ungrading for Social Justice: De-Centering Grades, Inequity, and White Supremacy17. Recovering Truth-Seeking Ethical Pedagogies for the Literature Classroom in a Post-Truth Age18. Shaping Identities: How Marginalized Students Harness Discourse to Reclaim Power in English Language Arts19. “I Make it What I Want”: Cultivating Fugitive Spaces of Acceptance and Resistance for Minoritized Students in the ELA ClassroomPart IV: Teachers of Emancipatory English20. Possibilities and Practicalities: English Teachers and Their Creation of Spaces for Students’ Voices and Agency21. U.S. Teachers, Book Bans, and Sustaining the Self in the Southern Discourse22. From Teacher to Teacher Educator: Developing an Anti-Racist, Anti-Biased Stance Kristen Hawley Turner23. Reflection and Liberation: The Reimagination of an English Methods CourseMadison Gannon and Jennifer Ervin
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781032746074
Publisert
2024-12-24
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
408

Om bidragsyterne

Andrew Goodwyn is President of the International Federation for the Teaching of English and a Fellow of the Royal Society of the Arts. He is also Emeritus Professor, The University of Reading, UK.

Jacqueline Manuel is Professor of English Education, Sydney School of Education and Social Work, University of Sydney, Australia.

Cal Durrant is retired Associate Professor in English Curriculum and Director of the Literacy Research Hub, Australian Catholic University, Australia.

Wayne Sawyer is Emeritus Professor, School of Education, Western Sydney University, Australia.

Marshall George is Olshan Professor of Clinical Practice, Hunter College, City University of New York, USA.

Melanie Shoffner is Professor of English Education, James Madison University, USA.