Description
Book SynopsisArtists have always had a role in imagining a more socially just, inclusive worldmany have devoted their lives to realizing this possibility. In a culture ever more embedded in performance and the visual, examining the role of arts in multicultural teaching for social justice is a timely focus. In Activist Art in Social Justice Pedagogy approaches to using activist art to teach a multicultural curriculum are examined and critiqued. Examples of activist artists and their strategies illustrate how study of and engagement in activist art processes glocallyconnecting local and global issuescan deepen critical literacy and commitment to social justice. This book is relevant to those (1) interested in teaching more about artist/activist social movements around the globe, (2) preparing pre-service teachers to teach for social justice, (3) concerned about learning how to engage diverse learners through the arts, (4) teaching courses related to arts-based multicultural education, crit
Trade Review
“Engaged. Inspired. Empowered. Agentic. What we wish for our students is exactly what this visionary revised edition of Activist Art in Social Justice Pedagogy offers its readers. Regardless of what or where you teach, this timely book will invite you to visualize yourself, your work, and your classroom as a site of creativity, imagination, and social power. Indeed, this book’s wonderful portraits of well-grounded activist work with children and youth are needed now more than ever.”—Christine Sleeter, Professor Emerita, California State University, Monterey Bay
“We should tremble with outrage at how arts education is being stolen from the most marginalized students. This is especially true in today’s era of de-conscientization, when the radical counter-normative possibilities of the arts grow increasingly vital. Activist Art in Social Justice Pedagogy is one antidote: a collective and subversive call from artists, educators, and activists to recenter the arts in the lives of youth and an invaluable collection of on-the-ground illustrations of student-centric activist art in motion. Read this book and join the revolution.”—Paul Gorski, Associate Professor of Integrative Studies, New Century College, George Mason University
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations – Acknowledgments – Cynthia Clabough: Note on the Cover Art: "The Night the Artist Became Activist" – Barbara Beyerbach: Introduction – Barbara Beyerbach: Social Justice Education Through the Arts – Tania Ramalho and Leah Russell – Learning About the Farmworkers and the Landless Rural Workers Movements Through the Arts – Leah Russell: Art and Change in the AfroReggae Cultural Group – Jacquelyn S. Kibbey: Media Literacy and Social Justice in a Visual World – Mary Harrell: Enlivening the Curriculum Through Imagination – Dennis Parsons: Photography and Social Justice: Preservice Teachers and the Ocularized, Urban Other – Jane Winslow: Creating Student Activists Through Community Participatory Documentaries – Jennifer Kagan/Chris Capella: Art Class at the Onondaga Nation School: A Practice of the Good Mind – Lisa Roberts Seppi: Indigenous Activism: Art, Identity, and the Politics of the Quincentenary – Carrie Nordlund/Peg Speirs/Marilyn Stewart/Judy Chicago: Activist Art and Pedagogy: The Dinner Party Curriculum Project – Lisa K. Langlois: Acting Up In and Out of Class: Student Social Justice Activism in the Tertiary General Education, Fine Arts, and Performing Arts Curriculum – Patricia E. Clark/Ulises A. Mejias/Peter Cavana/Daniel Herson/Sharon M. Strong: Interactive Social Media and the Art of Telling Stories: Strategies for Social Justice Through Osw3go.net 2010: Racism on Campus – Barbara Stout: In the Grey: Finding Beauty Without Labels – Suzanne Bellamy: The Art of Growing Food – Arnon A.m. de Andrade/Tania Ramalho (Translator): Complexity, Communication, Education, and the Making of Art – Ritu Radhakrishnan: It Starts With an Idea: Integrating Arts into the Classroom – Anneke McEvoy/Peter Cardone/Elias Williams: Sharing Our True Identity: Taking Environmental Portraits to Subvert Existing Community Narratives – Cynthia Clabough/Todd Behrendt/Elizabeth Brownell/Christi Harrington/Sharon Kane/Lacey McKinney/Kelly Roe: A Collective Endeavor—The Creatively Exploring Place, Self, and Collective Identity Project – Barbara Beyerbach/Tania Ramalho: Activist Art in Social Justice Pedagogy – About the Authors.