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Disrupting Colonial Pedagogies

Theories and Transgressions

Jillian Ford
Barcode 9780252045370
Hardback

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Release Date: 21/11/2023

Genre: Society & Culture
Sub-Genre: Gender Sex & Relationships
Label: University of Illinois Press
Series: Transformations: Womanist studies
Contributors: Jillian Ford (Edited by), Nathalia E. Jaramillo (Edited by), Jillian Ford (Contributions by), Nathalia E. Jaramillo (Contributions by), Silvia Garcia Aguilár (Contributions by), Khalilah Ali (Contributions by), Angela Malone Cartwright (Contributions by), Adriana Diego (Contributions by), LeConté Dill (Contributions by), Samenna Eidoo (Contributions by), Genevieve Flores-Haro (Contributions by), Leena Her (Contributions by), Patricia Krueger-Henney (Contributions by), Claudia Lozáno (Contributions by), Liliana Manriquez (Contributions by), Alberta Salazár (Contributions by), Leon Salazár (Contributions by), Lorri Santamaría (Contributions by)
Language: English
Publisher: University of Illinois Press

Theories and Transgressions
The impact of conquest and colonialism on identity and the construction of knowledge

Jillian Ford and Nathalia E. Jaramillo edit a collection of writings by women that examine womanist worldviews in philosophy, theory, curriculum, public health, and education. Drawing on thinkers like bell hooks and Cynthia Dillard, the essayists challenge the colonizing hegemonies that raise and sustain patriarchal and male-centered systems of teaching and learning. Part One examines how womanist theorizing and creative activity offer a space to study the impact of conquest and colonization on the Black female body and spirit. In Part Two, the contributors look at ways of using text, philosophy, and research methodologies to challenge colonizing and colonial definitions of womanhood, enlightenment, and well-being. The essays in Part Three undo the colonial pedagogical project and share the insights they have gained by freeing themselves from its chokehold.

Powerful and interdisciplinary, Disrupting Colonial Pedagogies challenges colonialism and its influence on education to advance freer and more just forms of knowledge making.

Contributors: Silvia García Aguilár, Khalilah Ali, Angela Malone Cartwright, Adriana Diego, LeConté Dill, Sameena Eidoo, Genevieve Flores-Haro, Jillian Ford, Leena Her, Nathalia E. Jaramillo, Patricia Krueger-Henney, Claudia Lozáno, Liliana Manriquez, Alberta Salazár, León Salazár, and Lorri Santamaría