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  • Title: Vital Questions Facing Disability Studies in Education

    Vital Questions Facing Disability Studies in Education

    Second Edition
    by Scot Danforth (Volume editor) Susan L. Gabel (Volume editor) 2017
    ©2016 Textbook
  • Title: Innovations in Transformative Learning

    Innovations in Transformative Learning

    Space, Culture, and the Arts- Foreword by Stephen Brookfield
    by Beth Fisher-Yoshida (Volume editor) Kathy Dee Geller (Volume editor) Steven A. Schapiro (Volume editor)
    ©2009 Textbook
  • Title: Writings of Healing and Resistance

    Writings of Healing and Resistance

    Empathy and the Imagination-Intellect
    by Mary E. Weems (Volume editor)
    ©2013 Textbook
  • Title: Media Interventions

    Media Interventions

    Afterword by Nick Couldry
    by Kevin Howley (Volume editor) 2013
    ©2013 Textbook
  • Title: Making Connections

    Making Connections

    Self-Study and Social Action
    by Kathleen Pithouse (Volume editor) Claudia Mitchell (Volume editor) Relebohile Moletsane (Volume editor)
    ©2010 Textbook
  • Title: 5. The Scandal of the Irrationality of Academia
  • Title: Principals of Higher Education Institutions in Barbados

    Principals of Higher Education Institutions in Barbados

    A Life History Methodology
    by Jean Butcher-Lashley (Author) 2022
    ©2022 Monographs
  • Title: Meditations on Resistance

    Meditations on Resistance

    An Inquiry into AI, Critical Media Literacy, and Social Justice
    by Tony Kashani (Author)
    ©2024 Textbook
  • Title: Meditations on Resistance

    Meditations on Resistance

    An Inquiry into AI, Critical Media Literacy, and Social Justice
    by Tony Kashani (Author)
    ©2024 Textbook
  • Title: Meditations on Resistance

    Meditations on Resistance

    An Inquiry into AI, Critical Media Literacy, and Social Justice
    by Tony Kashani (Author)
    Textbook
  • Critical Qualitative Research

    Critical research serves to address societal structures and institutions that oppress and exclude so that transformative actions can be generated that reduce inequitable power conditions. We invite proposals for authored and edited volumes that describe critical social science research (re)conceptualizations, practices, and methodologies that can be used by other scholars who wish to design and implement critical qualitative inquiry. Critical Qualitative Research challenges modernist orientations toward research by using social theory, designs, and research practices that emerge from critical questions like: Who/what is heard? Who/what is silenced? Who is privileged? Who is disqualified? How are forms of inclusion/exclusion being created? How are relations of power constructed and managed? How do various forms of privilege and oppression intersect to impact life possibilities for various individuals and groups? How do the arts inform research? How can multiple knowledges be engaged in research? How can research be socially just?

    43 publications

  • Post-Anthropocentric Inquiry

    In recent years, critical researchers, educators, and activists have become aware of the problems and limitations that have resulted by placing the ‘human’ at the center of all societal conceptualizations, concerns, and practices. Across fields, ranging from medical research laboratory practices—to the construction of the humanities—to the social sciences—to environmental studies (just to name a few), this anthropocentric focus is being called to question. The goal of this book series is to provide scholars and readers with critical opportunities to contest this anthropocentrism, (1) by creating a textual field of Post-Anthropocentric Inquiry that generates critical spaces for (re)thinking philosophies, knowledges, and ways of being/living and performing, as well as methodologies and inquiries, that decenter the human, (2) while at the same time attempting always/already to actively transform inequities and injustices performed by human privilege on nonhuman others, traditionally disqualified human others, and the natural world more broadly. This Post-Anthropocentric Inquiry can represent difference and the multiple, while at the same time exploring and welcoming notions of indistinction. Work that further develops and expands current notions of becoming (animal, earth), new feminist materialisms, critical posthuman sensibilities, hybrid existences (past and present) are example locations from which an intersectional, non-anthropocentric politics may emerge. Additionally, post-anthropocentric inquiry and activism will always include the unthought, not-yet-considered modes of living, thinking, research while critically acknowledging that alternatives can create new dualisms, new forms of human privilege, and are not always liberatory for those labeled not human or for those human beings who have traditionally been marginalized. Further, post-anthropocentric scholarship acknowledges, and attempts to (1) transform, the current post-anthropocentric predicament that facilitates neoliberal capitalism as all forms of life, matter, and relations have been/are constructed to serve market economies, and (2) examine the unprecedented human/nonhuman interaction with the increasingly intrusive and intimate technological order. Post-anthropocentric inquiry is necessary as related to these contemporary aggressive, and all-encompassing post-human conditions. Single or multiple authored manuscripts are encouraged that facilitate the development of Post-Anthropocentric Inquiry by addressing one issue, multiple issues, research purposes, methodologies, and/or forms of activism. Over a wide range of volumes that cross disciplines, the series will address broad issues, as mentioned above, and questions like the following: What is post-anthropocentric inquiry? What is made possible, enabled by post-anthropocentric approaches and research methodologies? How is post-anthropocentric research conducted without (re)privileging the human? How does the work in fields that would decenter the human, like critical animal studies, intersect with professional content and practices in fields like education or medicine? How can coalitions be formed (and actions taken) that decenter the human and increase possibilities for all forms of justice, while countering capitalist and technological orders that devalue all forms of life? Interested authors should contact Gaile S. Cannella, gaile.cannella@gmail.com

    2 publications

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