In these bones the economy of the world: A multi-logical, multi-representational cultural study

Item

Title
In these bones the economy of the world: A multi-logical, multi-representational cultural study
Identifier
d_2009_2013:bea4904b1b6d:10829
identifier
11152
Creator
Ali-Khan, Carolyne,
Contributor
Kenneth Tobin
Date
2011
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Pedagogy | Autoethnography | Bricolage | Critical pedagogy | Cultural studies
Abstract
In this work I offer critical interpretations of street skaters, images in schools, collaborative writing and discourses on Muslims in schools. Employing a phenomenological, hermeneutic approach, I have thought back on my experiences, made claims and supported them hermeneutically. As I have (in the tradition of critical pedagogy) told stories of being in the world, a critical perspective has anchored these stories to broader social, political and economic frameworks. Axiological concerns are at the forefront of this work, and the "so what?" question implicitly weaves through it. I do not seek to provide the answers, but rather to illuminate, through example, that asking questions of that which is taken for granted and connecting these questions to issues of power is a valid undertaking. In a world of truncated educational "accountability" this work joins those that seek to offer a counterpoints.;This dissertation explores work that has been done over the past three years in a variety of pedagogical contexts. As a manuscript style dissertation, it sews together freestanding texts with the thread of critical pedagogy. Each chapter (including half of the first chapter) has been published, only the last chapter (which discusses future work) is new. In each of these research projects I set out to use interdisciplinary and multi-textual approaches to focus on "other" ways of being in the world, and to question privileging practices and discourses that have been normalized in everyday life. As a bricolage, this work brings together multiple disciplines and theoretical discourses. I draw from a range of critical pedagogies and visual and literary methods. Throughout, I employ autoethnography as an entry point, to render accessible the worlds and worldviews that I seek to shed light on.
Type
dissertation
Source
2009_2013.csv
degree
Ph.D.
Program
Urban Education