Without a Word: Teaching Beyond Women's SilenceTaylor & Francis, 2024 M10 31 - 222 páginas The question of women’s silence within academic settings has received a great deal of attention. And much feminist educational scholarship has devoted itself to creating spaces where women’s stories and experiences can be told. Without a Word (first published in 1993) raises the question of women’s silence from a radical new perspective, lending at long last a theoretical basis and sophistication to this important issue. The author considers the subject of silence from a variety of conceptual and practical perspectives. When does silene occur among women? How does it emerge? What are its complex origins? What are its devastating effects? Lewis also discusses the different types of silence: the one which is an expression of a woman’s oppression and the one which is her act of revolt. Actual classroom interactions, student experiences, literary and filmic depictions of women, and her own personal voice are the material from which Lewis crafts her powerful theory. Intended to offer an understanding of the subject which can help feminists and teachers struggling to change the nature and dynamics of classroom experience for all students, Without a Word dramatizes the issue of silence in a way that moves beyond the mere need for women to speak and be heard. This book is a must read for students and researchers of education, feminist studies, women studies, and sociology. |
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... culture, language, gender, beliefs, and life history. This embeddedness lies at the core of the teaching-learning ... cultural, and historical artifact; It is about the implications for education of the politics of women seeking ...
... cultural, ethnic, racial, and economic backgrounds contesting the myth of our nonexistence even as we articulate the limits of our possibilities. From my own experience, I know that not all of what appears to be women's silence is the ...
... culture this bears particular relevance . As Catharine MacKinnon defines it , " the personal is political " means : that women's distinctive experience as women occurs within that sphere that has been socially lived as the personal ...
... culture is the context within which women can begin to legitimate our own experiences . It is also the context within which we might transcend the split between personal experience and social form . And finally , it is what is necessary ...
... cultural realities brings us to a place from which we can speak only very quietly- often tentatively— always with a fragile trembling like china on an insecure wall mount . Having several times crashed to the ground and now holding ...
Contenido
A Question of Silence | |
Conclusion | |
TAKING OUR PLACE IN THE ACADEMY | |
SCHOOLING AND THE STRUGGLE FOR SELF | |
FEMINIST STUDENT IN THE CLASSROOM | |
FEMINIST TEACHER IN THE CLASSROOM | |
AFTER THE WORDS | |
INDEX | |