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Kenneth J. Saltman – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
From climate disaster to the specter of nuclear annihilation to the rise of fascism and destruction of democracy to the advent of AI and other potentially destructive technologies, a number of material threats are matched by symbolic threats that undermine the capacities of people to respond. The war on public and critical education and the public…
Descriptors: Ecology, Privatization, Environmental Education, Climate
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Robin Truth Goodman – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
In 2021, the Florida Legislature passed House Bill 233. The bill has three provisions: 1) it mandates an "intellectual viewpoint diversity" survey that asks students, faculty, and other employees at Florida's public colleges and universities to report on their levels of comfort to express their ideological and political opinions; 2) it…
Descriptors: Public Colleges, Universities, State Legislation, Academic Freedom
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Jeffrey R. Di Leo – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
This article argues that it is only possible to teach without dread today if one does not value academic freedom. For these people, it is perfectly acceptable to be told what course they will teach, the content of those courses, and the modality of instruction. If one does not care about such things, then neoliberal academe with regard to teaching…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Academic Freedom, Professional Autonomy, COVID-19
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Henry A. Giroux – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
With the rise of authoritarian politics across the globe, echoes of a fascist past are with us once again signaling a looming and dangerous threat to education and democracy. This essay argues that is it crucial to engage fascism both as a language of white supremacy and a politics of disconnection. If fascism is to be addressed both politically…
Descriptors: Authoritarianism, Whites, Racism, Politics
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Ga Young Chung – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
In this paper, I explore the challenge and promise of developing an anti-racist and anti-colonial curriculum and pedagogy in a time of racialized dread. Drawing on my experience teaching a 10-week course on racial justice, delivered in the Korean language, to 1st generation Korean American seniors in the Southern United States. I explore how the…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Decolonization, Racial Factors, Asian American Students
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Michalinos Zembylas – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
The purpose of this paper is to suggest that the concept of "fugitive pedagogies of dread" contributes to affective, ontological and political reorientations of dread in teaching and learning for/about the future. To do so, the paper puts in conversation the concepts of "fugitivity" (from Black liberatory practices),…
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Educational Change, World Problems, Educational Philosophy
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Yuko Ida – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
This onto-epistemic experimental essay is a modest attempt to imagine another world yet to come in a time of what David Theo Goldberg calls "dread." To interrogate the unnamable feeling/texture the author's body wants to be free from, memories of the author, an…
Descriptors: Creativity, Memory, Poetry, Photography
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Graham B. Slater – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
Accelerating digitization, algorithmic computation, artificial intelligence, and machine learning, along with the increasing automation of work, communication, and everyday life, are central to critical studies of technology and political economy, as well as to public discourse concerning technology's role in creating futures. Ongoing…
Descriptors: Algorithms, Anxiety, Artificial Intelligence, Man Machine Systems
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Brianne Pitts; Dawnavyn James; Gregory Simmons – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
Some Black histories are absolutely dreadful. When we consider enslavement, racial violence, the terrors in the lynching of Emmett Till, the destruction of Tulsa during the Race Massacre, and the intergenerational traumas these events left behind, the residues of dread are made visible. Black histories are in a contentious social-political moment…
Descriptors: African American History, Elementary Secondary Education, Teachers, Educational Strategies
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Eric Ferris; Christopher G. Robbins – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
Recognizing that the American right, and specifically the Christian right, has achieved disproportionate power over shaping the landscape of education policy and political culture, the following engages in a twofold analysis of schooling in the United States. We consider the structural transformations that are being enacted as a result of the…
Descriptors: Public Education, Educational Policy, Politics of Education, Political Issues
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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
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Tyson E. Lewis – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
This article argues that hope is not an adequate affective response to dread. Indeed, hope and dread are more closely aligned than either critical or postcritical forms of educational philosophy would like to admit. The article proposes a shift from hope to joy as an under appreciated educational affect. To make this claim, the author pivots to…
Descriptors: Expectation, Psychological Patterns, Educational Philosophy, Anxiety