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David W. Kupferman – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2025
This paper considers educational futures from the perspective of social justice. It takes as its framework futures studies, which looks at what is probable (what is likely to happen), what is possible (what could happen), and what is preferable (what we would like to see/make happen). It also makes the case for science fiction as a method of…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Futures (of Society), Educational Change, Science Fiction
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Asilia Franklin-Phipps; Tristan Gleason – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2025
Critical pedagogy emphasizes the inseparability of politics and education (Freire, 2012; hooks, 1994). However, many strands of critical pedagogy are focused on ideological critique of elements of Modernity such as racism, sexism, colonialism, extractivism, and domination which are treated as unintended errors or ancillary conditions. That is,…
Descriptors: Politics of Education, Fiction, Imagination, Epistemology
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Christine Seon Rheem – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2025
This article constellates N.K Jemisin's "The Broken Earth" trilogy with decolonial epistemologies to push the boundaries of storied curricula and explore how we come to know. I argue that the imaginative world-building of science fiction can serve as worlding stories--not wording stories--that act, move, and connect knowledge,…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Story Telling, Reader Text Relationship, Colonialism
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Qui Dorian Alexander – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2025
"After the end of the world" is a speculative concept used to imagine what life could be after the world "ends" envisioning a new world that does not currently exist. Taking up Gumbs' metaphor, this essay explores what education could be "after the end of school," imaging a world beyond education as we know it to be.…
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Imagination, Fiction, Praxis
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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
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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)