Talking Truth, Confronting Power

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Author: Jerome Satterthwaite

ISBN-10: 1858564328

ISBN-13: 9781858564326

Category: Education - Philosophy & Social Aspects

This sixth volume in Trentham’s Discourse, Power, Resistance series brings together an international team of writers to get to grips with the issues of marginalized knowledges and silenced voices, and the ways and means of speaking out.\ Part 1, Uncovering Truth, opens with analyses of neoliberal notions of what counts as knowledge. Both criticize the cramped research methodologies that produce it and expose the ruthlessness of the cultural politics at work in the preservation of...

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This sixth volume in Trentham’s Discourse, Power, Resistance series brings together an international team of writers to get to grips with the issues of marginalized knowledges and silenced voices, and the ways and means of speaking out. Part 1, Uncovering Truth, opens with analyses of neoliberal notions of what counts as knowledge. Both criticize the cramped research methodologies that produce it and expose the ruthlessness of the cultural politics at work in the preservation of epistemological orthodoxy. This is illustrated by examples from Canada, Central America and the UK. The arguments of Part 1 are then brought together with a powerful restatement of Edward Said’s critique of cultural imperialism.Part 2, Talking Truth, challenges the silencing of resistant voices and insists that uncomfortable, disquieting truths must be told. Topics include how education is heading the wrong way, including a model that constructs learners as essentially clients in need of emotional care, thus frustrating their proper aspirations; how marginalized and silenced cultural groups are finding their voices and speaking out; and how unsayable things about race are being said. The book ends with a passionate advocacy of speaking from lived experience as a basis of sound knowledge.The contributors include: Norman Denzin (USA), Susan Heald (Canada), Ken Montgomery (Canada), Fazal Rizvi (USA), and James Rolling (USA).

Series Introduction: The Discourse Power Resistance Series: a Reflection Elizabeth Atkinson Atkinson, ElizabethIntroduction Jerome Satterthwaite Satterthwaite, Jerome1 The Elephant in the Living Room: or extending the conversation about the politics of evidence Norman K. Denzin Denzin, Norman K.2 Degrees of Denial: as global heating happens should we be educating for sustainable development or sustainable contraction? David Selby Selby, David3 Vulnerability - Analytical Concept or Rhetorical Idiom? Frank Furedi Furedi, Frank4 Risky Research or Researching Risk: the role of ethics review Pat Sikes Sikes, Pat Heather Piper Piper, Heather5 Whose Truth? Whose (Who's In) Power? International development, qualitative methodologies and science in Central America Susan Heald Heald, Susan6 'A Better Place to Live': School history text books, nationalist fantasies, and the incarcerating banality of white supremacy Ken Montgomery Montgomery, Ken7 Narrative Research, Narrative Capital, Narrative Capability Michael Watts Watts, Michael8 Speaking Truth to Power: Edward Said and the work of the intellectual Fazal Rizvi Rizvi, Fazal9 Blaspheming Self-Image: the reinterpretation of African American identity and other disruptions of contemporary master narratives James Haywood Rolling, Jr. Rolling, James Haywood, Jr.10 The 'R' Word: voicing race as a critical problem and not just a problem of practice Paul Warmington Warmington, PaulAuthors' biographiesIndex

\ From the Publisher“This collection of essays uses to the full the possible freedoms, both dramatic and insurgent, of intellectual debate. In doing so, the authors offer us a chance to see what academic work can, and should, be like.”\ \