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Christine Selinger – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2025
The "Star Trek" franchise presents a hopeful vision of the future that is free from many of the social issues that plague our current society. This research explores "Star Trek's" utopian vision through a disabled lens, presenting a critical content analysis examining the representation of mobility disability in the "Star…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Television, Ideology, Disabilities
Rickards, Nicholas G. – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2023
Through the use of horror movie motifs like zombies and mad doctors, "The Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials" (2015) stands in drastic contrast to other young adult dystopian properties like "The Hunger Games" (2012), for example, in that "Scorch Trials" uses allegory as a means to comment on neoliberalism, alienated…
Descriptors: Films, Popular Culture, Young Adults, Social Systems
S. Gavin Weiser; Linsay DeMartino – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2025
Like the depiction of plagues in apocalyptic science fiction, neoliberalism continues to infect education at all levels. This infection causes educators to care not for the children, but to embrace the figure of the Child. Reproductive futurism, in the imagined redemptive figure of the Child has been regulating the structure of education not for…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Science Fiction, Neoliberalism, Futures (of Society)
Lyiscott, Jamila J.; Caraballo, Limarys; Filipiak, Danielle; Riina-Ferrie, Joe; Yeom, Mijin; Amin Lee, Mikal – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2020
In this paper, six adult allies (comprised of four academic scholars, one in-service teacher, and one community-based teaching artist) reflect on what it meant for them to learn from the wisdom of eight years of intergenerational inquiry led by youth. The authors examine how youth researcher-activists make meaning of their realities within this…
Descriptors: Intergenerational Programs, Researchers, Action Research, Participatory Research
Huddleston, Gabriel – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2016
Diffraction is defined as the process by which a beam of light or other system of waves is spread out as a result of passing through a narrow aperture or across an edge. In this article, the author employs his favorite comic book character, Batman, and positions him as a tool of diffraction for education reforms. Huddleston argues that it is…
Descriptors: Public Education, Educational Change, Neoliberalism, Popular Culture
Sandlin, Jennifer A.; Garlen, Julie C. – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2017
This review begins from a premise of Disney as a cultural curriculum. After a brief history of Disney studies, tracing the cultural analysis of Disney through the twentieth century, and drawing upon several recent literature reviews of Disney scholarship, the authors survey some of the most notable work produced in the last 10 years. They describe…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Films, Recreational Facilities, Parks
Emdin, Christopher – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2017
In this article, Christopher Emdin articulates what he considers a necessary stance on the education of urban youth of color who are deeply embedded in hip-hop. He brings singer/songwriter Stevie Wonder and Maxine Greene into the discussion to highlight the ways that these youth can be imagined differently and taught to their strengths and gifts,…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Minority Group Students, Popular Culture, Music
Edwards, Erica; Esposito, Jennifer – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2016
In this article, Erica Edwards and Jennifer Esposito review the fourth season of "Love and Hip Hop New York," which is just a small part of the larger "Love and Hip Hop" reality TV series, which characterizes love through narrow representations of race, gender, and sexuality. Their analysis reports that this television program…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Television, Intimacy, Interpersonal Relationship
Hickey-Moody, Anna – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2016
In this article, the author strengthens and develops the theoretical platform for her concept of little public spheres. Hickey-Moody does so in order to present the concept as a tool for theorists who want to consider the political significance of marginalized youth. The concept of little publics is a theoretical frame the author developed to show…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged Youth, Political Influences, Self Concept, Political Attitudes
Gosine, Kevin; Tabi, Emmanuel – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2016
Historically rooted in Black and Latino youth subcultures of New York City, Hip-Hop emerged as a form of sociocultural expression by which young people, particularly those socially and culturally marginalized by race and class, voice their discontent, anger, and struggles, make sense of their social realities, and exercise resistance. In a White,…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Disadvantaged Youth, Popular Culture, Subcultures
Pollard, Tyler J. – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2014
The Texas Board of Education's sweeping approval of roughly one hundred changes to the social studies and history curriculum, a ban on so-called ''interpretive history'' in Florida, and a vitriolic campaign of book-banning in Arizona, indicate the extent to which American education and curriculum is currently under assault…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, History, Political Issues, Racial Bias
Orpana, Simon – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2014
With the rise of biopolitical modernity, states justify both the existence of zombies and their monopoly on coercive violence via an imperative to care for the populations within their purview. But biopolitics' intrinsic link to the rise of a neoliberal model of governance, demonstrated by Foucault (2008), places a contradiction at the heart…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Governance, Films, Popular Culture
Jubas, Kaela – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2013
In this article, the author outlines an analysis of the American show "Grey's Anatomy" as an example of how popular culture represents identity and the process of professional identity construction in a medical workplace, particularly the surgical service of a large urban hospital. In discussing identity, she connects professional identity to…
Descriptors: Television, Programming (Broadcast), Popular Culture, Surgery
Wallin, Jason J. – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2010
While the educational project privileges signifying speech, the psychical significance of the "voice" has become an institutional "vanishing mediator." Against the commonplace assumption that the voice functions as a benign vehicle for conscious meaning-making, this article examines the sublimated privilege and function of the voice in the context…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Social Influences, Theories, Teacher Attitudes
James, Carl E.; Marin, Lea; Kassam, Shelina – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2011
In a world in which social media, visual images, and instant messaging are the everyday realities of today's young people, films and videos play a crucial role in developing a critical understanding of how social, economic, political, and cultural structures mediate the lives of youth. As teaching tools and cultural media, videos, and films offer…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Ideology, Foreign Countries, Youth
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