Borders, belonging, beyond: New curriculum history


Autoria(s): Baker, Bernadette
Contribuinte(s)

Baker, Bernadette

Data(s)

2009

Resumo

For Iain Chambers, understanding the redefinition of social life and hence of social theories is not aided by splitting the analytical register simply between global and local. This is especially problematic if global is taken to mean the dispersal of an already-dominant or privileged version of the local within wider coordinates that ensure the continuation of forms of representation and frames of reference that are familiar and over-exposed. The chapters in New Curriculum History take up the challenge posed by Chambers, collectively confronting the dread of a rationality confronted with what exceeds and slips its grasp. Finding purchase and continually slipping away from the strictures of the taken-for-granted and of fixity, New Curriculum History embodies the dueling reverberations of its non-localizable domains – in some ways, a shaping by its pasts and in others, contributions irreducible to dominant narratives about the field of education and “its” histories...

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/89903/

Publicador

Sense Publishing

Relação

https://www.sensepublishers.com/catalogs/bookseries/educational-futures-rethinking-theory-and-practice/new-curriculum-history/

Baker, Bernadette (2009) Borders, belonging, beyond: New curriculum history. In Baker, Bernadette (Ed.) New Curriculum History. Sense Publishing, Rotterdam, The Netherlands, ix-xxxv.

Fonte

Faculty of Education; Faculty of Health

Tipo

Book Chapter