Book Review: Pedagogies of Re-Imagination and Unlearning: Decolonial Cracks Within/Against Settler Colonial Canada
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-4467.40430Keywords:
decoloniality, settler colonialism, pedagogies, colonialism, identity, curriculumAbstract
This book review is a close reading of three book-length works by key, contemporary scholars in the field of settler colonial studies: Walter Mignolo and Catherine Walsh's On Decoloniality; Adam Dahl's The Empire of the People; and Emma Battell Lowman and Adam Barker's Settler: Identity and Colonialism in 21st Century Canada. This review provides a critical account of the significance of navigating the complexities of modern settler colonial practices and frameworks within Western settler societies to better inform and navigate our own decolonizing processes. We identify settler logics, perspectives and foundational frameworks as key factors in our current educative practices. Through this, we debate the significance of unsettling our/selves to consider extensions of our identities through a decolonial lens and how we, as a society, contribute to ongoing colonial processes. The review also provides approaches to how these resources may be used to deepen our anti-colonial lens by considering these texts as an underlying basis to reflect upon current educative curricula.Downloads
Published
02-03-2020
How to Cite
Charlebois, B., Ewing, M., Davies, A., Rajavel, M., Wrestch, A., & Sykes, H. (2020). Book Review: Pedagogies of Re-Imagination and Unlearning: Decolonial Cracks Within/Against Settler Colonial Canada. Journal of the Canadian Association for Curriculum Studies, 17(2), 114–124. https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-4467.40430
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Book Reviews / Recensions
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