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[ecrea] CFP Cinema Journal Teaching Dossier
Tue Feb 17 18:39:20 GMT 2015
EXTENDED DEADLINE: CFP Cinema Journal Teaching Dossier: Critical
Pedagogies in Neoliberal Times
Edited by Courtney Bailey and Julie Wilson, Allegheny College
The increasingly corporatized neoliberal university represents an
aggressive threat to critical pedagogies and professors who resist the
safe spaces of diversity discourse and actively address systems of
privilege and oppression. On an institutional level, this threat
manifests itself in amplified efforts to build brand identity and value
proposition in a competitive market, policies and practices designed to
“protect” those brands, and increased reliance on capital campaigns in
the face of governmental austerity measures. As crystalized powerfully
by the Salaita case, academic freedom no longer provides a sufficient
counter-balance to these forces of corporatization.
At the same time as these larger institutional forces work against close
examinations of power and systemic inequality, professors committed to
these issues are increasingly likely to find their pedagogies challenged
from below by students. On the one hand, challenges come from students
with reactionary politics or those who do not want to confront their own
privilege. On the other hand, challenges also come from students who
have themselves been traumatized by systems of oppression. Prominent
debates over “trigger warnings,” for instance, speak to fundamental
tensions we must now navigate: how to teach about the brutal workings of
systemic oppression in a context where neoliberal tenets of personal
responsibility and privatization individualize suffering and its
solutions in ever more insidious ways. Critical media and cultural
studies scholars are poised to feel these tensions even more acutely, as
we often teach with graphic images that reflect and make present the
very regimes we hope to disrupt through our critical pedagogies.
For this issue of the Cinema Journal Teaching Dossier, we hope to
collect a range of essays on critical media pedagogies in neoliberal
times. Specifically, we are looking for essays that reflect on how we
might navigate the myriad forces of neoliberalism impinging on our
classrooms. How can we constitute our media/cultural studies classrooms
spaces of resistance in the context of corporatized education? How do we
meet, confront, and/or disrupt the neoliberal politics of identity that
students bring to our classrooms? What are the specific challenges faced
by critical media instructors today, and how can we productively address
these challenges?
We welcome essays focused on specific assignments, other pedagogical
approaches/strategies grounded in particular case studies or contexts,
or more theoretically-oriented contributions. Please submit a 250-word
abstract for a proposed 1500-word essay and a 150-word biography to
Courtney Bailey ((cbailey /at/ allegheny.edu) <mailto:(cbailey /at/ allegheny.edu)>)
and Julie Wilson ((jwilson /at/ allegheny.edu) <mailto:(jwilson /at/ allegheny.edu)>)
by February 23th. Completed essays (including all images and links) will
be due on May 1st.
--
Assistant Professor of Communication Arts
Managing Editor, /Film Criticism/
Allegheny College
520 N Main St., Meadville, PA 16335
tel: 814-332-2307, web: http://joetompkins.wordpress.com/
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