Description
About the Author
Sandy Grande is associate professor and Chair of the Education Department at Connecticut College. Her research interfaces critical Indigenous theories with the concerns of education. In addition to Red Pedagogy: Native American Social and Political Thought (2004, 2015), she has also published several book chapters and articles including: Accumulation of the Primitive: The Limits of Liberalism and the Politics of Occupy Wall Street.
Reviews
The first edition of Red Pedagogy had a deservedly powerful impact. This new edition is even more powerful. It combines a searing critique with renewed insights and passion-and at the same time asks all of us who calls ourselves critical educators to challenge some of the very bases of what we take for granted and who the "we" actually is. -- Michael W. Apple, EdD, John Bascom Professor of Education, University of Wisconsin, Madison and author of "Can Education Change Society?"
This may well be the most important book you will read on the United States educational system viewed through the lens of the Native American experience; its history, present, and future, come into focus. Red Pedagogy is a classic work already, and with this 10th Anniversary edition, it soars beyond the original text to a collective collaboration, expanding and deepening its profound thesis, which in the 21st century finds Native Nations as prisoners of democracy under a continuing colonial regime. Free of jargon, this beautifully composed, powerful, and ultimately hopeful book should be read by everyone. -- Roxanne Dunbar Ortiz, author of "An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States"
Situated in an academic context of intellectual sectarianism, Sandy Grande's 10th anniversary edition of Red Pedagogy distinguishes itself from re-prints of other classic texts in that it is accompanied by a handful of leading critical and indigenous scholars Grande boldly invited to critique and extend her work. The second extended (but not expanded) edition of Red Pedagogy is therefore a welcomed and much needed revolutionary intervention into anti-colonialist/anti-capitalist scholarship. Coming at a time of both heightened imperialist immiseration and anti-colonialist/anti-capitalist/anti-imperialist resistance, Grande's interrelated call for critique and collectivity points to a rigorous red pedagogy desperately needed to sharpen analysis and hone a collective strategy, which also happens to be, for communists, the purpose of the party. Indeed, Red Pedagogy's commitment to bring together Critical Indigenous Studies and critical pedagogy, including Marxism, in a dialectical, revolutionizing relationship is further evidence of the ways Grande demonstrates (as does the party) how collectivity does not require sacrificing the individual to the collective, but rather creates an experience of mutuality and togetherness demonstrating the cruel deception of a socially isolating and dangerous settler (i.e. capitalist) logic. The second edition of Red Pedagogy, due to its theoretical and methodological advancements, will continue to inform the practice and debate concerning education's role in the movement against the dispossession, exploitation, and disempowerment of Indigenous Nations and against imperialism and capitalism more generally. The second edition of Red Pedagogy will surely become another classic in its own right. -- Curry Malott, West Chester University of PA
The first edition of Red Pedagogy established Sandy Grande as one of the most important critical educational scholars because, as an indigenous scholar-activist, she asked us to consider what it meant to do critical pedagogy in the context of settler colonialism. In this new edition of Red Pedagogy, Grande pushes the conversation even further, inviting us to think about the complex relationship of critical politics and indigeneity amidst sharpening racial and economic inequalities, white supremacy, and in the continuing wake of #IdleNoMore and #BlackLivesMatter. Anyone interested in understanding the intersection of radicalized capitalism, indigenous liberation, and critical pedagogy needs to read the 10th Anniversary Edition of Red Pedagogy. -- Wayne Au, Associate Professor, University of Washington Bothell; editor, Rethinking Schools
Red Pedagogy constitutes one of the most significant indigenous scholarly works in the critical pedagogical tradition. In this second edition, Sandy Grande powerfully returns to her earlier theoretical arguments to further extend her original ideas in ways that beautifully contribute to both the longstanding historical struggle for liberation within indigenous communities and to a decolonizing politics that must be at the heart of all educational struggles for social justice today. -- Antonia Darder, Leavey Endowed Chair of Ethics and Moral Leadership, Loyola Marymount University, author of "Culture and Power in the Classroom"
Book Information
ISBN 9781610489898
Author Sandy Grande
Format Paperback
Page Count 346
Imprint Rowman & Littlefield
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Weight(grams) 513g
Dimensions(mm) 230mm * 151mm * 25mm