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OverviewCritical Articulations of Hope from the Margins of Arts Education presents perspectives on arts education from marginalized contexts and communities around the world. The contributors of this collection are educators, researchers, and artists who have devoted their research and practice to exploring how to utilize arts education to work toward justice, equity, sustainability, and hope when communities or groups of people are faced with most challenging and arduous situations. This book depicts hardships and struggles, including forced migration; institutionalized discrimination; economic, ecological and cultural oppression; hatred; prejudice and violence. However, it also celebrates the strength of individuals and communities who strive to make a difference and work towards fair and just cultures and communities. The book proposes that participation in the arts is a basic human right and that diverse cultures and the arts are an integral aspect of healthy lives and societies. Building on long traditions of arts education for social justice, critical pedagogy, and the pedagogy of hope, it facilitates international dialogue and explores how the theory and practice for arts education can be furthered by including insights emerging from practices evolving as sensitive to marginal conditions. Critical Articulations of Hope from the Margins of Arts Education will be of great interest to academics, researchers and postgraduate students of the arts, arts education, and education. It will also appeal to arts educators, community artists, sociologists, cultural workers and teacher training faculty and in service-learning and other pedagogy-related courses. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Eeva Anttila (Theatre Academy of University of the Arts, Finland.) , Anniina Suominen (Aalto University School of Arts, Design and Architecture, Finland.)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.399kg ISBN: 9780815362838ISBN 10: 0815362838 Pages: 182 Publication Date: 23 October 2018 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews"""Critical Articulations of Hope from the Margins of Arts Education provides valuable insights into people’s lives as they live with and deal with political, cultural, economic and social challenges. The power of the book is found in its ‘real’ and ‘grass roots’ accounts of how arts education pays attention to marginalised voices and how arts experiences provide support, refuge and hope. The dialogue implicit in the structure of the book places emphasis on the need to share and listen to others experience. That we can, and consistently do share and reflect on experience in and through art and arts education reveals the power of diverse cultural practices in articulating diverse voices at the margins."" Associate Professor Ralph Buck (PhD) is Head of Dance Studies, University of Auckland, New Zealand." ""Critical Articulations of Hope from the Margins of Arts Education provides valuable insights into people’s lives as they live with and deal with political, cultural, economic and social challenges. The power of the book is found in its ‘real’ and ‘grass roots’ accounts of how arts education pays attention to marginalised voices and how arts experiences provide support, refuge and hope. The dialogue implicit in the structure of the book places emphasis on the need to share and listen to others experience. That we can, and consistently do share and reflect on experience in and through art and arts education reveals the power of diverse cultural practices in articulating diverse voices at the margins."" Associate Professor Ralph Buck (PhD) is Head of Dance Studies, University of Auckland, New Zealand. Critical Articulations of Hope from the Margins of Arts Education provides valuable insights into people's lives as they live with and deal with political, cultural, economic and social challenges. The power of the book is found in its `real' and `grass roots' accounts of how arts education pays attention to marginalised voices and how arts experiences provide support, refuge and hope. The dialogue implicit in the structure of the book places emphasis on the need to share and listen to others experience. That we can, and consistently do share and reflect on experience in and through art and arts education reveals the power of diverse cultural practices in articulating diverse voices at the margins. Associate Professor Ralph Buck (PhD) is Head of Dance Studies, University of Auckland, New Zealand. Author InformationEeva Anttila works as a professor of dance pedagogy at Theatre Academy of University of the Arts Helsinki, Finland. Her research interests include dialogical and critical dance pedagogy, embodied learning, embodied knowledge and practice-based/artistic research methods. Anniina Suominen is an Associate professor of Art Pedagogy in the Department of Art at the Aalto University School of Arts, Design and Architecture, Helsinki, Finland. Her research and teaching focus on advancing equity and social justice through the arts as well as sensuous epistemologies and pedagogies. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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