Democracy 2.0: Media, Political Literacy and Critical Engagement: Critical Media Literacies Series, cartea 1
Editat de Paul R. Carr, Michael Hoechsmann, Gina Théséeen Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 feb 2018
Democracy requires a functioning, critically-engaged and literate populace, one that can participate in, cultivate and shape, in meaningful and critical ways, the discourses and forms of the society in which it exists. Education for democracy, therefore, requires not only political literacy but also media and digital literacies, given the ubiquity and immersiveness of Media 2.0 in our lives.
In Democracy 2.0, we feature a series of evocative, international case studies that document the impact of alternative and community use of media, in general, and Web 2.0 in particular. The aim is to foster critical reflection on social realities, developing the context for coalition-building in support of social change and social justice. The chapters herein examine activist uses of social and visual media within a broad and critical frame, underpinning the potential of alternative and DIY (Do It Yourself) media to impact and help forge community relationships, to foster engagement in the civic and social life of citizens across the globe and, ultimately, to support thicker forms of democratic participation, engagement and conscientization, beyond electoralist, representative, normative democracy.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789463512282
ISBN-10: 9463512284
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Critical Media Literacies Series
ISBN-10: 9463512284
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Critical Media Literacies Series
Cuprins
Foreword: It’s a Post-Truth World After All xiShirley R. Steinberg
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction: Democracy 2.0, Old and New Media, and the Quest for Engaged Participation xv
Michael Hoechsmann, Paul R. Carr, and Gina Thésée
Section 1: Democracy and Mediatized Participation
1. Technocracy, Education, and the Global Imperative 3
Peter Pericles Trifonas
2. Voluntary Subservience and Capitalist Religion in the Era of Reality Television Politics 13
William M. Reynolds
3. The Development of Democratic Citizenship within the Context of Education for Latin American Unification: Media Literacy 2.0, from Classroom Praxis to Critical
Engagement 27
Raul Olmo Fregoso Bailon and Felipe de Jesús Alatorre Rodríguez
4. Digital Citizens, Not Just Consumers: Defining Digital Citizenship for Democracy 49
Megan Ryland
5. Engagement with the Mainstream Media and the Relationship to Political Literacy: The Influence of Hegemonic Education on Democracy 65
Paul R. Carr, Gary W. J. Pluim, and Lauren Howard
Section 2: Contexts of Contested Notions of Democracy and Media
6. Embodiment as Discourse in Indigenous Photography: Narrative as Multiplicitous Reality 85
Kalli Paakspuu
7. The Role of Social Media in Africa’s Democratic Transitions: Lessons from Burundi 109
Anne Munene and Ibrahim Magara
8. Critical Pedagogy through Participatory Video: Possibilities for Post-Colonial Higher Education in the Caribbean 127
Lynette Sampson
9. Community-Driven Media in Australia: The Public Pedagogy of Australian Indigenous Activism 147
Renee Desmarchelier, Jon Austin, and Cally Jetta
10. The Battle for Free Universal Education in Chile: Using YouTube in the Student Protests of 2011 165
Salomé Sola-Morales
11. The #Ocupaescola (#Occupyschool) Movement: Counter-Hegemonic Media and New Ways to Fight for Education 181
Ivan Bomfim
12. “Democracy! Not Just for Locals But for Us Too!”: Exploring Multi-Ethnic Young People’s Calls for Social Change in Hong Kong through Cellphilms 195
Casey Burkholder
Afterword: Danger Ahead: Ready Yourself and Join the Struggle 213
Peter McLaren
Author Biographies 219
Index 225
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction: Democracy 2.0, Old and New Media, and the Quest for Engaged Participation xv
Michael Hoechsmann, Paul R. Carr, and Gina Thésée
Section 1: Democracy and Mediatized Participation
1. Technocracy, Education, and the Global Imperative 3
Peter Pericles Trifonas
2. Voluntary Subservience and Capitalist Religion in the Era of Reality Television Politics 13
William M. Reynolds
3. The Development of Democratic Citizenship within the Context of Education for Latin American Unification: Media Literacy 2.0, from Classroom Praxis to Critical
Engagement 27
Raul Olmo Fregoso Bailon and Felipe de Jesús Alatorre Rodríguez
4. Digital Citizens, Not Just Consumers: Defining Digital Citizenship for Democracy 49
Megan Ryland
5. Engagement with the Mainstream Media and the Relationship to Political Literacy: The Influence of Hegemonic Education on Democracy 65
Paul R. Carr, Gary W. J. Pluim, and Lauren Howard
Section 2: Contexts of Contested Notions of Democracy and Media
6. Embodiment as Discourse in Indigenous Photography: Narrative as Multiplicitous Reality 85
Kalli Paakspuu
7. The Role of Social Media in Africa’s Democratic Transitions: Lessons from Burundi 109
Anne Munene and Ibrahim Magara
8. Critical Pedagogy through Participatory Video: Possibilities for Post-Colonial Higher Education in the Caribbean 127
Lynette Sampson
9. Community-Driven Media in Australia: The Public Pedagogy of Australian Indigenous Activism 147
Renee Desmarchelier, Jon Austin, and Cally Jetta
10. The Battle for Free Universal Education in Chile: Using YouTube in the Student Protests of 2011 165
Salomé Sola-Morales
11. The #Ocupaescola (#Occupyschool) Movement: Counter-Hegemonic Media and New Ways to Fight for Education 181
Ivan Bomfim
12. “Democracy! Not Just for Locals But for Us Too!”: Exploring Multi-Ethnic Young People’s Calls for Social Change in Hong Kong through Cellphilms 195
Casey Burkholder
Afterword: Danger Ahead: Ready Yourself and Join the Struggle 213
Peter McLaren
Author Biographies 219
Index 225
Notă biografică
Paul R. Carr is a Full Professor in the Department of Education at the Université du Québec en Outaouais, Canada, and is also the UNESCO Chair in Democracy, Global Citizenship and Transformative Education.
Michael Hoechsmann is an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Education at Lakehead University (Orillia).
Gina Thésée is a Full Professor in the Department of Education and Pedagogy at University of Quebec à Montreal (UQAM) in Montreal, Canada.
Michael Hoechsmann is an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Education at Lakehead University (Orillia).
Gina Thésée is a Full Professor in the Department of Education and Pedagogy at University of Quebec à Montreal (UQAM) in Montreal, Canada.