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Diversity and decolonization in German studies
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Diversity and decolonization in German studies/ edited by Regine Criser, Ervin Malakaj.
其他作者:
Criser, Regine.
出版者:
Cham :Springer International Publishing : : 2020.,
面頁冊數:
xxi, 366 p. :ill., digital ;24 cm.
內容註:
1. Introduction: Diversity and Decolonization in German Studies -- 2. Accounting for our Settler Colonialism: Towards an Unsettled German Studies in the United States -- 3. Habits of Mind, Habits of Heart: Cultivating Humanity through a Decolonized German Studies Curriculum -- 4. Social Justice in the Language Curriculum: Interrogating the Goals and Outcomes of Language Education in College -- 5. Decolonizing German Studies While Dissecting Race in the American Classroom -- 6. Documents of Colonialism and Racial Theorizing in the German Classroom -- 7. Decolonizing the Mental Lexicon: Critical Whiteness Studies Perspectives in the Language Classroom -- 8. A Developmental Model of Intercultural Competence: Scaffolding the Shift from Culture-Specific to Culture-General -- 9. Study Abroad Otherwise -- 10. A Question of Inclusion: Intercultural Competence, Systematic Racism, and the North American German Classroom -- 11. Supporting Graduate Students of Color in German Studies: A Syllabus -- 12. Digital Media Network Projects: Classroom Inclusivity through a Symphilosophical Approach -- 13. Disrupting the Norm: Disability, Access, and Inclusion in the German Language Classroom -- 14. Multidirectional Memory as Decolonial Pedagogical Practice in German Studies -- 15. "Please Don't Gender Me!" Strategies for Inclusive Language Instruction in a Gender-Diverse Campus Community -- 16. Intersectionality and Notions of Diversity in the Internationalized German Studies Program at the University of Melbourne -- 17. Dear Incoming Graduate Student Colleague.
Contained By:
Springer eBooks
標題:
German language - Study and teaching (Higher) -
標題:
Germany - History -
電子資源:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-34342-2
ISBN:
9783030343422
Diversity and decolonization in German studies
Diversity and decolonization in German studies
[electronic resource] /edited by Regine Criser, Ervin Malakaj. - Cham :Springer International Publishing :2020. - xxi, 366 p. :ill., digital ;24 cm.
1. Introduction: Diversity and Decolonization in German Studies -- 2. Accounting for our Settler Colonialism: Towards an Unsettled German Studies in the United States -- 3. Habits of Mind, Habits of Heart: Cultivating Humanity through a Decolonized German Studies Curriculum -- 4. Social Justice in the Language Curriculum: Interrogating the Goals and Outcomes of Language Education in College -- 5. Decolonizing German Studies While Dissecting Race in the American Classroom -- 6. Documents of Colonialism and Racial Theorizing in the German Classroom -- 7. Decolonizing the Mental Lexicon: Critical Whiteness Studies Perspectives in the Language Classroom -- 8. A Developmental Model of Intercultural Competence: Scaffolding the Shift from Culture-Specific to Culture-General -- 9. Study Abroad Otherwise -- 10. A Question of Inclusion: Intercultural Competence, Systematic Racism, and the North American German Classroom -- 11. Supporting Graduate Students of Color in German Studies: A Syllabus -- 12. Digital Media Network Projects: Classroom Inclusivity through a Symphilosophical Approach -- 13. Disrupting the Norm: Disability, Access, and Inclusion in the German Language Classroom -- 14. Multidirectional Memory as Decolonial Pedagogical Practice in German Studies -- 15. "Please Don't Gender Me!" Strategies for Inclusive Language Instruction in a Gender-Diverse Campus Community -- 16. Intersectionality and Notions of Diversity in the Internationalized German Studies Program at the University of Melbourne -- 17. Dear Incoming Graduate Student Colleague.
'As Criser and Malakaj convincingly argue, in spite of frequent critical assessments of "the state of German Studies" over the last three decades, very little seems to change. This volume, on the other hand, has the potential to transform the field. Its contributors, by bringing discourses of diversity and decolonization into the center of German Studies, offer radically new ways to think about our curricula, our interactions with students, and our scholarly work.' - Jennifer Redmann, Professor of German, Franklin & Marshall College, USA This book offers a critical look at postsecondary German Studies curricular models by engaging with scholarship on diversity and decolonization. Next to theoretical considerations about how German Studies faculty can approach diversity and decolonization, individual contributions also provide practical models and guidelines that lead to curricula, which help attend to diversity and decolonization. Connecting German Studies with critical race, whiteness, gender, sexuality, migration, and disability studies, this volume brings together German Studies scholars from a range of institutions and at various levels of their career to map out a path towards decolonization and a more inclusive discipline. Regine Criser is Assistant Professor of German Studies at the University of North Carolina Asheville, USA, where she also serves as the coordinator of the First Year Seminars and the Director of the UNCA Prison Education Program. She is a co-founder of the Diversity, Decolonization, and the German Curriculum (DDGC) scholarly collective. Her research focuses on cultural representations of the GDR in contemporary Germany, inclusive pedagogy, and conceptualizations of belonging. Ervin Malakaj is Assistant Professor of German Studies at the University of British Columbia, Canada. He is a co-founder of the Diversity, Decolonization, and the German Curriculum (DDGC) scholarly collective. He specializes in late-18th- to 21st-century German media and cultural history. His research focuses on 19th-century literary cultures, film history, narrative theory, queer theory, and critical pedagogy.
ISBN: 9783030343422
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-030-34342-2doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
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LC Class. No.: PF3065 / .D584 2020
Dewey Class. No.: 430.711
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1. Introduction: Diversity and Decolonization in German Studies -- 2. Accounting for our Settler Colonialism: Towards an Unsettled German Studies in the United States -- 3. Habits of Mind, Habits of Heart: Cultivating Humanity through a Decolonized German Studies Curriculum -- 4. Social Justice in the Language Curriculum: Interrogating the Goals and Outcomes of Language Education in College -- 5. Decolonizing German Studies While Dissecting Race in the American Classroom -- 6. Documents of Colonialism and Racial Theorizing in the German Classroom -- 7. Decolonizing the Mental Lexicon: Critical Whiteness Studies Perspectives in the Language Classroom -- 8. A Developmental Model of Intercultural Competence: Scaffolding the Shift from Culture-Specific to Culture-General -- 9. Study Abroad Otherwise -- 10. A Question of Inclusion: Intercultural Competence, Systematic Racism, and the North American German Classroom -- 11. Supporting Graduate Students of Color in German Studies: A Syllabus -- 12. Digital Media Network Projects: Classroom Inclusivity through a Symphilosophical Approach -- 13. Disrupting the Norm: Disability, Access, and Inclusion in the German Language Classroom -- 14. Multidirectional Memory as Decolonial Pedagogical Practice in German Studies -- 15. "Please Don't Gender Me!" Strategies for Inclusive Language Instruction in a Gender-Diverse Campus Community -- 16. Intersectionality and Notions of Diversity in the Internationalized German Studies Program at the University of Melbourne -- 17. Dear Incoming Graduate Student Colleague.
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