Home
:
Book details
:
Book description
Description of
Teaching Double Negatives: Disadvantage and Dissent at Community College (Counterpoints)
Teaching Double Negatives: Disadvantage and Dissent at Community College asks whether exploring narratives that subvert dominant Western paradigms of progress in classrooms enables students to re-narrate and represent their lives. In seven years of teaching literature and philosophy at Brooklyns only community college, Robert Cowan worked with many kinds of disadvantaged studentsthose on welfare or homeless, single moms and the formerly incarcerated, traumatized war veterans, and immigrants from over 140 countries. These students had many reasons for wanting to dissent from the social norms that sought to define and marginalize them. One might imagine that disadvantaged students would identify with texts that are subversive, challenge dominant race/class/gender paradigms, and try to interrogate the globalized systems in which we live. But do they? Do the philosophies of Debord and Heidegger, the novels of Christa Wolf and Jean Genet, contemporary slave narratives and Dead Kennedys lyrics, poetry by Aim Csiare and Taliban fighters, actually speak to them? Can you teach dissent to the disadvantaged and produce a positive result? Read more