From ‘Aggressive Masculinity’ to ‘Rape Culture’ is the fifth volume in this series and explores the relationship between gender and sex roles and socialisation and education, foregrounding issues of inequity and different forms of oppression in various contexts. It tells a rich story of transformation of a field over nearly half a century, in relation to the theorisation of gender and sexuality in educational philosophy and theory. The transformation of this field is mapped on to broader social trends during the same period, enabling a better understanding of the potential role of educational philosophy and theory in developing feminist, queer, and related veins of scholarship in the future.
The collection of texts focuses on a wide range of topics, including nature versus nurture and the debate over whether gender and sex roles are natural or based upon culture and socialisation, gender and sexual binaries, and how power is organised and circulates within educational spaces (including possibly online spaces) with regard to enabling or disrupting sexually oppressive or violently gendered social conditions. Other important trends include Internet activism and the use of intersectional theory, postcolonial theory, and global studies approaches.
From ‘Aggressive Masculinity’ to ‘Rape Culture’ will be key reading for academics, researchers and postgraduate students in the fields of philosophy of education, philosophy, education, educational theory, post-structural theory, the policy and politics of education, and the pedagogy of education.
From ‘Aggressive Masculinity’ to ‘Rape Culture’ is the fifth volume in this series and explores the relationship between gender and sex roles and socialisation and education, foregrounding issues of inequity and different forms of oppression in various contexts.
Introduction
Aggressive Masculinity, Queer Politics, and Rape Culture: The Theorisation of Gender and Sexuality in Philosophy of Education
Liz Jackson and Michael A. Peters
- Education and aggression
J.J. Smolicz
- Education for sexism: A theoretical analysis of the sex/gender bias in education
Bronwyn Davies
- The rational woman
Martin Simons
- Mill’s epistemology in practice in his liberal feminism
Gail Tulloch
- Gender socialisation and the nature/culture controversy: the dualist’s dilemma
Ruth Jonathan
- More sexes please?
Felicity Haynes
- Democracy, social justice and education: Feminist strategies in a globalising world
Penny Enslin
- Antonio Gramsci and feminism: The elusive nature of power
Margaret Ledwith
- Queer politics in schools: A Rancierean reading
Claudia Ruitenberg
- American Chimera: The ever-present domination of whiteness, patriarchy, and capitalism…a parable
Roberto Montoya, Cheryl E. Matias, Naomi W.M. Nishi and Geneva L. Sarcedo
- Selfies, relfies, and phallic tagging: Posthuman participations in teen digital sexuality assemblages
Emma Renold and Jessica Ringrose
- Weinstein, sexual predation, and ‘Rape Culture’: Public pedagogies and Hashtag Internet activism
Michael A. Peters and Tina Besley
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Liz Jackson is Associate Professor of Education at the University of Hong Kong and the Director of the Comparative Education Research Centre.
Michael A. Peters is Professor of Education at the University of Waikato, New Zealand and Emeritus Professor in Educational Policy, Organization, and Leadership at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. He is the executive editor of the journal Educational Philosophy and Theory.