Hip-Hop
and Critical Pedagogy
ON-LINE Special Issue of
Radical Teacher, No. 97
Call for Submissions
All submissions due no later
than February 15, 2013
With this special issue we
propose to construct a frame for understanding the place of Hip Hop in
classrooms—from K-12 public schools and other youth-based community spaces
to college and university courses. With the increasing popularity of what
some are calling Hip Hop Studies, it becomes essential to think critically
about a range of methodological approaches, innovative instructional
strategies and the overall challenges (practical,
political and ethical) of
teaching Hip Hop. Central to our concerns is a focus on critical
literacy, defined by Ira Shor as “learning to read and write as part of
the process of becoming conscious of one's experience as
historically constructed within
specific power relations." With this special issue of Radical
Teacher we plan to consider the function of Hip Hop as a nexus of
pedagogical innovation and critical literacy.
We seek contributions from a
range of practitioners who are exploring the use of Hip Hop music and
related elements of Hip Hop culture in the classroom. Our
definitions (of “Hip Hop,” of “classroom,” and so on) are, necessarily,
flexible: our interest is in publishing a diverse range of writings that
will help us all think about happens when Hip Hop becomes academic.
In this light we welcome submissions from educators, activists,
and scholars whose experiences
have provided interesting data on this subject. Possible formats
include conventional research papers and essays, interviews, annotated
lesson plans, syllabi and bibliographies, anthologies of student work, and
visual art.
Among other topics, we can
imagine submissions treating:
Hip Hop and social justice
teaching
Hip Hop K-12 instruction
Hip Hop at the University and
Liberal Arts College
Hip Hop research strategies
and agendas
Hip Hop and critical literacy
practices
Hip Hop as global
consciousness
Hip Hop and the politics of
race
Hip Hop, Gender, and Sexuality
Hip Hop Studies and
Traditional Fields of Study
Hip Hop Studies Methodologies
Hip Hop and Youth Organizing
Hip Hop and Africanist
Aesthetics
Hip Hop and political
organizing
Hip Hop, Police Brutality, and
the Carceral State
Hip Hop and the Occupy
Movement
Hip Hop and alternative media
practices
Please send submissions and
inquiries to: radicalteachhiphop@gmail.com
Guest Editors: Christopher M.
Tinson, Ph.D., Hampshire College and Carlos Rec McBride, M.Ed., University
of Massachusetts, Amherst
Radical Teacher is a
socialist, feminist, and anti-racist journal grounded in radical left
politics. We publish articles that focus on education written by
educational workers at all levels, in traditional and nontraditional institutions.
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