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Revolutionary Subject: Pedagogy of Women of Color and Indigeneity New edition [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 290 pages, height x width: 225x150 mm, weight: 450 g
  • Sērija : Education and Struggle 10
  • Izdošanas datums: 21-May-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1433134063
  • ISBN-13: 9781433134067
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  • Cena: 49,32 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 290 pages, height x width: 225x150 mm, weight: 450 g
  • Sērija : Education and Struggle 10
  • Izdošanas datums: 21-May-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1433134063
  • ISBN-13: 9781433134067
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
A Revolutionary Subject: Pedagogy of Women of Color and Indigeneity is a call to radical educators, grassroots organizers, and others on the left to recognize the enormous historical legacy of and potential for revolutionary praxis that exists among Women of Color and Indigeneity.

A Revolutionary Subject: Pedagogy of Women of Color and Indigeneity is a call to radical educators, grassroots organizers, and others on the left to recognize the enormous historical legacy of and potential for revolutionary praxis that exists among Women of Color and Indigeneity. This book revitalizes Marx’s dialectics to challenge class-reductionism, highlighting a class struggle that is also necessarily anti-racist, anti-sexist, and against all forms of oppression.

Recenzijas

This book is one of the most compelling conceptualizations of Marxist social theory to date, embedded in a captivating personal life story that leaves the reader humbled and challenged by one-sided regimes of truth, entangled in unjust power relations, legitimized by dominant social systems. Having been born in communist Poland, this book rattles my socio-cultural convictions and is a bold pedagogical tool for critical awaking, reaching out beyond national borders, gender, ethnicity, and social class. I sense that this book will raise worldwide interest. It earns a place at the table with bell hookss works. Anna Odrowaz-Coates, Professor at Maria Grzegorzewska University (Warsaw, Poland) Lilia D. Monzó invites us to join her in epistemological encounters with revolutionary women from the past and present. She summons Marx to the table to illuminate a socialist imaginary as an alternative to capitalism and Freire to advise our prefigurative commitment to move in the spirit of horizontalidad (humane horizontal relationships that challenge domination). Standing on these shoulders, as a Woman of Color, I feel I can fly and dream of a new world committed to a new humanism. Monzó gifts us with an invaluable compendium of sheroes from around the world who we can be grateful for as we launch our futures from their remarkable legacies. Suzanne SooHoo, Professor and Jack H. and Paula A. Hassinger Chair in Education at Chapman University and co-director of the Paulo Freire Democratic Project This study of the impact of Women of Color and Indigenous peoples on the social struggles of our time profoundly illuminates the complex relation of class, race, and gender through an open-ended dialectical perspective. It challenges Eurocentric readings of Marxs work while showing that all social theories must be re-thought and re-developed anew in light of the ideas and perspectives being generated by Chicanx and Latinx women, Indigenous peoples, and the Black Freedom Movement. Peter Hudis, Professor at Oakton Community College and author of Marxs Concept of the Alternative to Capitalism and Frantz Fanon: Philosopher of the Barricades Women of Color around the world continue to suffer the devastating impact of racialized capitalism, despite historical efforts to promote gender equality. In A Revolutionary Subject: Pedagogy of Women of Color and Indigeneity, Lilia D. Monzó provides a much-needed Marxist-humanist rereading of coloniality and gendered exploitation to her engagement of the woman question, placing the voices and experiences of Women of Color at the center of the discourse. The result is an excellent treatise that challenges bourgeois liberal feminist notions of empowerment by reinvigorating the tradition of historical materialism with revolutionary gendered insights of indigeneity and class struggle. Antonia Darder, Leavey Presidential Endowed Chair of Ethics and Moral Leadership at Loyola Marymount University A Revolutionary Subject: Pedagogy of Women of Color and Indigeneity is an important text. By sharing contemporary and historical examples, as well as relating elements of her own narrative, Lilia D. Monzó has created a book that will help readers learn from stories that are too often unknown or poorly understood. It is a valuable tool for stimulating critical conversations and paths of action among educators, policymakers, and others who are committed to equity. Carla R. Monroe, Editor of Race and Colorism in Education Lilia D. Monzó draws upon Marxist, humanist, and feminist theory, as well as theology of liberation, to develop a new type of pedagogy of the oppressed for the twenty-first century that connects the need to uproot capitalism with the equally necessary uprooting of racism, sexism, and heterosexism. She bases her argument on the writings, life experiences, and struggles of Women of Color and Indigenous women, from the barrios and ghettoes of the Americas to other sites of revolutionary ferment, from France to China and from Russia to Rojava. This remarkable and original work theorizes a type of radical pedagogy that can accompany, help sustain, and help deepen the critical consciousness of some of todays most important movements for revolution and social justice. Kevin B. Anderson, Professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and author of Marx at the Margins A Revolutionary Subject: Pedagogy of Women of Color and Indigeneity is a tour de force. By moving her analyses beyond a bourgeois reformist agenda, Lilia D. Monzó cleverly and courageously situates her denouncement of patriarchy in a revolutionary praxis that keenly unveils that any authentic empowerment of women must include all oppressed women who come to voice through conscientization rather than through voice-as-gift by those who remain complicit with the privileges inscribed in whiteness. In a revolutionarily eloquent yet accessible prose, Monzó dares us to imagine the voice of Women of Color not as a gift but as a democratic rightas a human right. She challenges all men and women who think of themselves as agents of change to aspire for coherence and deeply comprehend that, in the end, there will be no change without privilege suicide. Donaldo Macedo, Distinguished Professor of Liberal Arts and Education at the University of Massachusetts

Acknowledgments xi
Preface: Walking With Grace, Fighting With Courage: Lilia Monzo's Marxist Humanism xv
Peter McLaren
Notes xxv
Bibliography xxvi
Chapter 1 An Introduction
1(36)
A World of Unfreedoms
5(4)
Capitalism: A System of Exploitation
9(7)
Race, Class, and Gender: A Marxist-Humanist Approach
16(4)
Hegel, Marx, and the Making of Freedom
20(3)
Revolutionary Critical Pedagogy
23(3)
Organization of the Book
26(2)
Notes
28(4)
Bibliography
32(5)
Chapter 2 Indigenous Women and Women of Color on the Trenches of Freedom
37(42)
Class and the Mode of Production
42(3)
The Rise of Gender Exploitation and Class Relations
45(2)
Industrialization and the Family
47(3)
Coloniality, Slavery, and Primitive Accumulation
50(6)
Whitestream Feminisms
56(6)
Women of Color and Indigeneity in the Settler-Colonial State
62(5)
Gender and Racialization Under Global Capitalism
67(4)
Notes
71(3)
Bibliography
74(5)
Chapter 3 Marx on Women, Non-Western Societies, and Liberation: Challenging Misconceptions
79(24)
Marx on Women, the Family, and Gender Relations
81(5)
"Productive" and "Unproductive" Labor
86(4)
Marx on Racism, Family, and the Revolutionary Potential of Non-Western Societies
90(8)
Marx's Humanism and a New Society
98(1)
Notes
99(2)
Bibliography
101(2)
Chapter 4 In Search of Freedom: My Road to Marx
103(34)
Capitalist Delusions: The Immigrant Narrative Confronted
107(3)
On Feminist Understandings and the Right to Speak
110(5)
In Survival Mode---Race and Gender as Class Warfare
115(5)
A Colonial Legacy
120(5)
New Hope and New Courage
125(9)
Notes
134(1)
Bibliography
135(2)
Chapter 5 Women Making Revolutionary History
137(44)
Women as Revolutionary Spark and Motor
138(7)
The Paris Commune
139(2)
The Russian Revolution
141(1)
Consciousness as Their Driving Force
142(3)
Organizing for Mass Support: Assata Shakur and the Black Panther Party
145(5)
The Revolutionary Writing of Ding Ling
150(8)
Women in Leadership: Celia Sanchez and the Cuban Revolution
155(3)
Women in Combat: Zhao Yiman
158(2)
Indigenous Women and Women of Color Practicing Horizontalism
160(10)
The Zapatistas
161(3)
Rojava
164(3)
Black Lives Matter
167(3)
Invisible Oppressions: Race, LGBTQIA, and Other Intersections
170(1)
Challenging Backseat Politics
171(2)
Notes
173(4)
Bibliography
177(4)
Chapter 6 En la Lucha Siempre: Chicanx/Boricua/Latinx Women as Revolutionary Subjects
181(24)
The Revolutionary Subject
184(3)
Boricua, Chicanx, and Latinx Women en Accion
187(1)
Latinx Women Activists
188(13)
Marisol: Activista de su communidad
190(2)
Cheyenne: A Native Womxn's Story
192(3)
Martha: Indocumentada e invencible
195(2)
Anaida: Toda una vida en accion
197(4)
Learning From Chicanx/Boricua/Latinx Women's Stories
201(2)
Notes
203(1)
Bibliography
204(1)
Chapter 7 Gendered and Racialized Capital: Tensions and Alliances
205(34)
Capitalism, Colonialism, and Racialization: Toward a Unitary Theory
207(5)
A Contested Terrain
212(5)
Race, Whiteness, and the Model Minority Myth
217(5)
Criminalizing Migration
222(9)
Building Solidarity and Remaking the World
231(1)
Notes
232(3)
Bibliography
235(4)
Chapter 8 Pedagogy of Dreaming
239(38)
Why Dreaming?
246(5)
Dreaming as Epistemology: Challenging Temporal "Rationality" and the Politics of Now
251(3)
Dialogue Beyond Words: Finding the Silence That Let the Other Speak
254(5)
Red Love: Beyond the Bourgeois Family
259(4)
Walking With Grace: Musings From This Latinx Woman of Color
263(9)
Notes
272(2)
Bibliography
274(3)
Appendix: Martha: Undocumented and Invincible 277(2)
Note 279(2)
Index 281
Lilia D. Monzó is Associate Professor in the Attallah College of Educational Studies at Chapman University.