Cultural Pedagogy: Art/Education/Politics

Front Cover
Bloomsbury Academic, 1992 M04 20 - 178 pages

In recent years, debates over culture and education have entered the public consciousness as never before. Politicians, bureaucrats, and scholars have credited these endeavors with the capacity to influence matters ranging from public morality to national productivity. Trend examines points at which art and learning intersect in both traditional and nontraditional settings and offers a variety of alternatives for the construction of a new cultural pedagogy. He argues that we need to redefine concepts like art, literature, and education, to integrate them more fully into our lives.

On one hand, Trend uses a critical approach to examine how cultural work and pedagogy intersect within a range of discourses such as Marxist, feminist, deconstructionist and postcolonial. Yet on the other, he focuses on the use of specific examples of cultural practice within and outside the classroom to emphasize the importance of action as well as philosophy to bring about social change. Trend provides a theoretical overview of the ideological battles over texts and their discursive contexts and then analyzes how cultural education has evolved in such settings as the school, the university, and the community. He concludes with a discussion of pedagogy and democracy which suggests a range of possible resolutions.

About the author (1992)

DAVID TREND is most recently co-director of programs at the Capp Street Project, a nonprofit alternative arts organization. Trend spent five years as editor of Afterimage, the award-winning progressive visual arts publication. He lectures nationally on media and culture and has written over 80 articles and essays for such periodicals as Afterimage, Art in America, Cultural Studies, and Exposure. He holds an MFA in visual arts studies from the State University of New York at Buffalo.

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