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Noah De Lissovoy – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
The contemporary landscape of dread in living and teaching demands a creative and experimental form of investigation that can trace the affective contours of the present and uncover the obscure openings for an oppositional imagination. In a series of interlinked excurses, this essay articulates a poetic probing of the nexus of slow fascism and…
Descriptors: Social Systems, Authoritarianism, Realism, Literary Devices
Low, Remy – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2016
In this article, the author submits that the push for moderation and social cohesion through deradicalization is an inadequate response to violence inspired by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) because it elides the political disaffections to which the group speaks. In advancing this argument, the author suggests that the rhetoric of ISIS…
Descriptors: Social Integration, Terrorism, Muslims, Violence
Lezra, Esther – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2014
An act of atrocity is an act of violence that is perceived to exceed the boundaries of what a legitimate punitive measure--either against an individual or a collective group of people-would be for retribution for the unjust infliction of an injury. Atrocities are enacted, experienced, witnessed, and translated. They take multiple forms. What makes…
Descriptors: Empathy, Teaching Methods, Violence, History
Fraser, Cary – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2009
This article presents the author's response to Henry Giroux's "The University in Chains: Confronting the Military-Industrial-Academic Complex." Henry Giroux has written a provocative assessment of the contemporary challenges facing the United States as a society, which over the course of the 20th century had assumed the role of leader and exemplar…
Descriptors: Democracy, Governance, Politics, Social Change
Simpson, Jennifer S. – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2010
In the classroom, issues including 9/11 and the occupation of Iraq often bring affective and cognitive investments among students and teachers to the forefront. Dialogue, conflicting viewpoints, and critical questioning, all central components of healthy democracies, become fraught with allegiances to long-held and frequently unseen norms. This…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Democracy, Classroom Communication, Social Attitudes
Carvalho, Edward J. – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2010
In 2007, against a tragically ironic backdrop of National Poetry Month, April indeed was "the cruellest month" (Eliot 1922, I.1). The media spotlight during that time repositioned from Iraq and Afghanistan to Blacksburg, Virginia, where a stateside guerilla incursion at Virginia Tech would mark the single worst episode of school shooting…
Descriptors: United States History, Social Problems, Violence, Terrorism
Espiritu, Karen; Moore, Donald G. – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2008
In the wake of the September 11, 2001, attacks on the Pentagon and World Trade Center, and amid sweeping patriotic declarations that the suicide hijackers had waged a war on America as well as democracy, the energetic response by public intellectuals, academics, philosophers, and theorists has been to ask, what "America," what "democracy," what…
Descriptors: Terrorism, Democracy, Essays, War
Ball, Anna – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2008
September 11, 2001 generated diverse responses from around the world, but for many subjects located in "the West," an enduring perception surfaced in the aftermath of the attacks: that 9/11 revealed the fragility of the "Western Self" as a secure identity. In a move towards self-scrutiny post 9/11, it is not only the presence…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Foreign Countries, Terrorism, Cultural Influences
Tamatea, Laurence – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2008
The intent of this article is to explore how No Child Left Behind (NCLB) emerges from a discursive frame that is also used in relation to neoliberal corporate conquests and, significantly, America's war on terror. The article first demonstrates through reference to online resistance discourses and NCLB, how NCLB is a product of and reproduces the…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Educational Policy, Terrorism, Discourse Analysis
Saltman, Kenneth J. – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2006
This article illustrates how global corporate education initiatives, though profit-motivated, sometimes function both as an instrument of foreign policy and as a manifestation of a broader imperial project. According to neoconservative scholars, as well as their critics, the events of September 11, 2001, allowed the implementation of pre-made…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Development, Curriculum Design, Corporate Education
Street, Paul – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2003
A thesis concocted by right-wing ideological watchdogs and advanced with elevated urgency in the wake September 11, 2001, claims that America's college and university students are hostage to a leftist, "moral-relativist" and multiculturalist professoriat. To restore right-thinking to college campuses, the argument continues, academic…
Descriptors: Political Affiliation, Political Issues, Whites, Minority Groups