
- 209 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Culture is inextricable from politics. This includes the politics of who we are, as teachers, intellectuals, writers, cultural workers, and students, and what we want to bring to and take from the site of instruction. It also includes the politics of who we want to be, as citizens, professionals, and active contributors to our communities and to the world in general, and what we can be, realistically, in the particular contexts in which we live. Teaching Politically addresses some of the political constraints that shape our pedagogical spaces, especially in the teaching of literature. The book brings together a global group of academics, activists, public intellectuals, poets, and novelists to examine the way politics manifest pedagogically, and how a commitment to educating manifests politically, in and beyond the classroom. At the heart of the discussion is how political and professional paradigms chafe against, intersect with, or otherwise become inseparable from each other in any vocation that attempts to educate: from writing, journalism, and public speaking to art, activism, and medicine. Contributors: Dimitris Christopoulos, Dimitri Dimoulis, Khaled Fahmy, Rishi Goyal, May Hawas, Bonnie Honig, Mona Kareem, Benjamin Mangrum, Nora Parr, Bruce Robbins, Ahdaf Soueif, Omid Tofighian, Elahe Zivardar
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- Introduction
- Melville’s Democratic Pedagogy: Moby-Dick Takes On Hobbes’s Leviathan
- Liberal Education and the Politics of Discussion
- Teaching While Arab
- Whose Politics? Teaching Palestinian Literature
- “Don’t Speak or Laugh! Greece Is in Danger!”: Censoring Dissident Discourse on So-Called National Issues in Greece
- The Politics of Mentorship
- Teaching Literature Politically: Some Examples
- Baking and Breaking Bread, or Daniel Defoe and the Catastrophic Imagination
- Foundations for Nauru Prison Theory: Australian Border Violence, Art, and Knowledge Production
- Politics Was in the Very Air We Breathed
- Contributors
- Index