Letter from the Editor

IF 0.2 Q3 AREA STUDIES
Heather L. Ferguson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Perhaps it is fitting, amidst the unending slog of pandemic teaching and a year of escalating geopolitical crises across AfroEurasia, that our long-delayed issue of RoMES presents a plethora of voices arraigned around our Special Focus topic “Spotlight on Pedagogical Perspectives and the Politics of Representation.” The idea for this topic emerged from a 2020 MESA panel attentive to volatile and contentious debates in the public sphere concerning Muslim identities and Middle Eastern geopolitical realities and social movements. Over the course of the past year, professors, students, activists, and law makers have sought to highlight patterns of misrepresentation, misattribution, and misappropriation in what amounts to a collective effort to position MENA dynamics as part of a global movement to redress inequity and establish new pedagogical, legal, and political paradigms. While many of us may feel discouraged when scrolling through our social media feeds replete with evidence of damaged and precarious lives and territories, this issue of RoMES should also inspire us to stay engaged with the discursive power afforded us as members of an expanding vision of MESA. First, Corey Sherman (University of California, Hastings) opens the issue with an “ethnographically informed textual and structural analysis of public high school curricula in Washington, D.C.” and the processes by which this curriculum represents and, arguably, “produces” the Middle East in the minds of its students, teachers, and administrators. As school board meetings across the U.S. become the staging ground for defining past and present “truths” of the nation and drawing new definitions of “us” and “them,” Sherman’s essay shakes us out of the confines of higher education and reminds us of the stakes involved in public debates. We shirk these public debates at the risk of further isolating academic knowledge production and at the risk of MENA lives. Second, Ranjit Singh (University of Mary Washington) leads us through the techniques and strategies for addressing the BDS movement in an undergraduate seminar. As MESA members, we have debated the role of the organization in analyzing and labeling historical and contemporary events in Israel/ Palestine. Singh pointedly draws our attention to the classroom as a site for critical engagement with the methods and the ethics of how we as scholars, professors, and members of the global community navigate debates around one of the more significant movements of our time. Third, Mariam Alkazemi, Sameneh Oladi Ghadikolai, Marilynn Oetjens, and Edward L. Boone
编辑来信
在无休止的疫情教学和一年来非洲-欧亚大陆地缘政治危机不断升级的情况下,我们拖延已久的《RoMES》杂志围绕我们的特别焦点话题“聚焦教育视角和代表政治”发出了大量声音,这也许是合适的。“这个话题的想法来自2020年MESA的一个小组,该小组关注公共领域关于穆斯林身份、中东地缘政治现实和社会运动的不稳定和有争议的辩论。在过去的一年里,教授、学生、活动家和法律制定者试图强调虚假陈述、错误归因和挪用的模式,这相当于一种集体努力,将中东和北非地区的动态定位为全球运动的一部分,以纠正不公平现象,并建立新的教学、法律和政治范式。虽然我们中的许多人在浏览充斥着生活和领土受损和不稳定的证据的社交媒体时可能会感到气馁,但RoMES的这个问题也应该激励我们继续参与作为MESA不断扩大的愿景的一员所提供的话语权力。首先,Corey Sherman(加利福尼亚大学黑斯廷斯分校)以“华盛顿特区公立高中课程的民族志文本和结构分析”以及该课程在学生、教师和管理者心目中代表并可以说“产生”中东的过程来开启这个问题。随着美国各地的学校董事会会议成为定义国家过去和现在“真相”的舞台,并对“我们”和“他们”进行新的定义,谢尔曼的文章让我们摆脱了高等教育的局限,并提醒我们公共辩论所涉及的利害关系。我们冒着进一步孤立学术知识生产和中东和北非地区生命的风险,回避这些公开辩论。其次,兰吉特·辛格(玛丽华盛顿大学)在本科生研讨会上带领我们介绍了应对BDS运动的技术和策略。作为MESA成员,我们就该组织在分析和标记以色列/巴勒斯坦历史和当代事件方面的作用进行了辩论。辛格尖锐地提请我们注意,课堂是一个批判性参与的场所,我们作为学者、教授和国际社会成员如何围绕我们这个时代最重要的运动之一进行辩论。第三,Mariam Alkazemi、Sameneh Oladi Ghadikolai、Marilynn Oetjens和Edward L.Boone
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