Things (Don’t Quite) Fall Apart: Exploring the Diversity Insertion in the Secondary ELA Canon

IF 0.7 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Geoff Bender
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT This article presents the results of five open-ended surveys administered to two Advanced Placement classes in a primarily White high school in upstate New York. Surveys sought to explore how students make sense of the course diversity selection, Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, which was inserted into a primarily White textual canon. Responses were coded and analysed via a Critical Discourse Analysis methodology. Analysis revealed that while many students replicated the discursive patterns of White innocence, characterised by an obliviousness to their complicity in White supremacy, some students, often coming from marginalised social positions, registered more nuanced reactions to the power dynamics represented in the text. The study concludes that while diversity insertions like Things Fall Apart can be mechanisms that actually reinforce White supremacy due to a perceived social disconnect, modest insights can also be generated by students seeking to better understand the dynamics of contemporary social oppression.
事物(不完全)分崩离析:探索第二ELA经典中的多样性插入
摘要本文介绍了对纽约州北部一所以白人为主的高中的两个高级预科班进行的五项开放式调查的结果。调查试图探索学生如何理解课程多样性选择,Chinua Achebe的《分崩离析》,该书被插入了一本以白人为主的文本经典中。通过批判性话语分析方法对回答进行编码和分析。分析显示,尽管许多学生复制了白人天真无邪的话语模式,其特点是忽视他们在白人至上主义中的同谋,但一些学生往往来自边缘化的社会地位,对文本中所代表的权力动态做出了更微妙的反应。该研究得出结论,虽然像《分崩离析》这样的多样性插入可能是由于感知到的社会脱节而实际上强化白人至上主义的机制,但寻求更好地理解当代社会压迫动态的学生也可以产生适度的见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Changing English-Studies in Culture and Education
Changing English-Studies in Culture and Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
25.00%
发文量
37
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