Teaching Villainification in Social Studies -

Teaching Villainification in Social Studies

Pedagogies to Deepen Understanding of Social Evils
Buch | Hardcover
240 Seiten
2024
Teachers' College Press (Verlag)
978-0-8077-6969-0 (ISBN)
185,80 inkl. MwSt
In this collection, scholars from the United States, Canada and Australia examine the concepts of villainification and anti-villainification in social studies curriculum, popular culture, as well as within sociocultural contexts and their implications.
In this collection, scholars from the United States, Canada, and Australia examine the concepts of villainification and antivillainification in social studies curriculum and popular culture, as well as within broader sociocultural contexts. Villainification is the process of identifying an individual or a small group of individuals as the sole source of a larger evil. Antivillainification considers the messy space in between individual and group culpability in order to help students develop a sense of responsibility to each other as humans in communities on this planet. Chapter authors examine topics related to U.S. politics, financial education, Holocaust education, difficult histories, apocalypse fiction, the Marvel Cinematic Universe, technology use, LGBTQ school experiences, rape culture, geographies of invasion, and the female body. Taken together, these inquiries into villainification offer thoughtful and powerful insights for teaching about historical wrongdoing in more nuanced ways, addressing the responsibility we all have to create a better world.


Book Features:




Pushes the field of social studies to develop a more nuanced understanding of the villains of the past and present.
Invites educators to become more thoughtful about not only curriculum but also the world around us.
Helps readers to more deeply understand how easily forms of banal evil can touch our lives within and beyond the classroom, and what we might do about it.
Examines how systemic forces can influence “average” individuals to cause or contribute to great societal harm.
Includes teacher-friendly engagements with theory, using examples from middle and high school classrooms.
Offers a wide range of contexts related to social studies education, including civics, economics, geography, and history.

Cathryn van Kessel is an associate professor of curriculum studies at Texas Christian University and a former secondary social studies and Latin teacher from Canada. Kimberly Edmondson is a doctoral student in the Faculty of Education at the University of Alberta and a high school social studies teacher in Alberta, Canada.

Contents


Foreword: The Problem of Villainification  Michalinos Zembylas  vii


Acknowledgments  xi


Introduction  1

Cathryn van Kessel and Kimberly Edmondson


PART I: VILLAINIFICATION AND SOCIAL STUDIES CURRICULUM


1.  Heroification, Villainification, and Political Polarization: Implications for Thinking Politically About U.S. Politics  13

WayneJournell


2.  “Incapable, Uninterested, and Ineffective”?: Locating Villainification Narratives in Financial Education  29

ErinC. Adams


3.  Will the Real Villain Please Stand Up?: Holocaust Education and Its Hidden Transgressors  45

RebeccaC. Christ, Brandon Haas, and Oren Baruch Stier


4.  Removing the Binaries in History Curricula and Teacher Education: Difficult-ishas an Antidote to Villainification and Its Partner, “Difficult Histories”  63

Brittany Jones


PART II: VILLAINIFICATION LESSONS FROM POPULAR CULTURE


5.  Subverting the Villain Trope in Apocalyptic Fiction: Survivance in MoonoftheCrustedSnow  79

Kimberly Edmondson and Keri Helgren


6.  “Hang On, So That Thing’s a Loki Too?”: Mimetic Materialities, Variants, and Villainy  95

BrettonA. Varga and ErinC. Adams


7.  Wanda the Villain?: How WandaVisionCan Aid Discussions About Enslavement and Anti-Black Racism  111

Danelle Adeniji, Melissa McQueen, and Cathryn van Kessel


PART III: SOCIOCULTURAL IMPLICATIONS OF VILLAINIFICATION NARRATIVES


8.  Can Technology Be Evil?: Heroes, Villains, and the Banality of Technology  127

RyanM. Smits and DanielG. Krutka


9.  Identifying the Villain: Antivillainification, Social Studies, and LGBTQ Individuals  145

Heather P. Abrahamson


10.  Anti-Complicity Education: Combating Supervillains and Lesser Villains in Contemporary Rape Culture  161

AmandaM.E. Thomson


11.  Placial Villains: Naming, Memorial Geographies of Invasion, and the Work of Social Studies  181

Bryan Smith


12.  Horses, Heretics, and Madame Déficit: The Historical Villainification of the Female Body  197

Andrew Thomson


Concluding Thoughts  213

Cathryn van Kessel and Kimberly Edmondson


About the Editors and Contributors  215


Index  219

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Research and Practice in Social Studies Series
Mitarbeit Herausgeber (Serie): Wayne Journell
Vorwort Michalinos Zembylas
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 162 x 235 mm
Gewicht 476 g
Themenwelt Schulbuch / Wörterbuch
Geisteswissenschaften Psychologie Sozialpsychologie
Sozialwissenschaften Pädagogik
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie
ISBN-10 0-8077-6969-X / 080776969X
ISBN-13 978-0-8077-6969-0 / 9780807769690
Zustand Neuware
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