Subject to Fiction: Women Teachers' Life History Narratives and the Cultural Politics of ResistanceOpen University Press, 1998 - 153 pages Situated within current feminist/poststructuralist theories regarding the subject, this book focuses on the lives of three women teachers and their narrative strategies to author themselves as active agents within and against the essentializing discourses of teaching. The text argues that the complex and contradictory ways in which these women construct themselves as subjects, while simultaneously disrupting the notion of a unitary subject, point to new ways of thinking about subjectivity, resistance, power and agency. The implications of this, alleged, reconceptualization for feminist theorizing, curriculum theory and life history research are woven throughout the book. |
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Page 49
... grade math problems so I could help my smart ninth - graders , or plan the history lesson carefully so I'd keep generals on the right side . We had no work books . First - graders did have a box of letters with which they'd spell out ...
... grade math problems so I could help my smart ninth - graders , or plan the history lesson carefully so I'd keep generals on the right side . We had no work books . First - graders did have a box of letters with which they'd spell out ...
Page 82
... grade , and the eighth grade , and the eleventh grade and asking the same questions ; the only difference was the quality level . So we tried to break that , and that was very difficult to do . Some people quit teaching social studies ...
... grade , and the eighth grade , and the eleventh grade and asking the same questions ; the only difference was the quality level . So we tried to break that , and that was very difficult to do . Some people quit teaching social studies ...
Page 102
... grading and cheating . Bonnie did not feel administrators should have absolute veto power over a teacher's grade , nor in deciding whether a student had cheated . Bonnie believed that administrators , who weren't in touch daily with the ...
... grading and cheating . Bonnie did not feel administrators should have absolute veto power over a teacher's grade , nor in deciding whether a student had cheated . Bonnie believed that administrators , who weren't in touch daily with the ...
Table des matières
impossible fictions | 1 |
1 | 16 |
It is not what you teach but who you are | 43 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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active activist agency Agnes Agnes's Alice Temple authority believe bell hooks Bettina Aptheker body Bonnie's career central Chicago classroom Cleo Cleo's story collaborative College complex concepts conflicting construction contradictory critical critical theory cultural curriculum decision deferral despite discourse of professionalism discourse of teaching disrupt dominant gender dominant ideologies drifter embedded engaged enter teaching expectations experiences false consciousness femininity feminism feminist fiction focus form of resistance Foucault functions gender identity gender ideologies gender norms highlighted historians interpreted interviews lives maintain male marriage plot masculinist means Minh-ha moves into administration Munro narrative nature negotiation neo-Marxist notions oppression patriarchal political poststructuralism poststructuralist power relations progressivism reflected regulation rejection research process research relationship rewrite role self-representation sense social studies Stevenson High School struggle subject position subvert suggests teaching as women's theory things tion traditional understanding of resistance unitary University voice woman women teachers women's true profession