Re-Imagining Community and School through Youth and Artists' Critical Superhero Storytelling

被引:1
|
作者
Enciso, Patricia [1 ]
Krone, Beth [2 ]
Solange, Gabrielle [3 ]
机构
[1] Ohio State Univ, Dept Teaching & Learning, Columbus, OH 43210 USA
[2] Kennesaw State Univ, Dept English, Kennesaw, GA 30144 USA
[3] RunSongProductions, Whitehall, OH 43213 USA
来源
SOCIAL SCIENCES-BASEL | 2023年 / 12卷 / 06期
关键词
storytelling; community engagement; artists; imagination; school culture; historical bodies; historical spaces; middle school;
D O I
10.3390/socsci12060363
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
In this article, we describe the methods and pedagogy that guided a superhero storytelling project, located in a midwestern middle school library, where youth were invited to work with a university-based research team and community-based artists who actively displaced historically formed practices of surveillance and silencing in the service of amplifying youth artistry and knowledge production. We recognize that school practices in many schools, by virtue of their complicity with hierarchical and evaluative mandates, undermine open and exploratory forms of youth expression. The arts-based project we describe, informed by a ten-year history of small-scale storytelling projects in the same school, offers a theoretical and related pedagogical framework for working with community-based artists to re-imagine and remake oppressive relational, epistemological, and material practices in school spaces. At the center of our report are two groups of youth and the artists and educators who supported them as they invented superheroes and activated the imaginative potential of their local community spaces for their storytelling.
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Re-Imagining Inclusion Through the Lens of Disabled Childhoods
    Balter, Alice-Simone
    Feltham, Laura E.
    Parekh, Gillian
    Douglas, Patty
    Underwood, Kathryn
    van Rhijn, Tricia
    [J]. SOCIAL INCLUSION, 2023, 11 (01) : 48 - 59
  • [22] Decolonising the curriculum through hospicing and collective re-imagining
    Melanie Baak
    Denise Chapman
    [J]. Curriculum Perspectives, 2024, 44 (1) : 83 - 86
  • [23] Re-imagining global health through social medicine
    Adams, Vincanne
    Behague, Dominique
    Caduff, Carlo
    Lowy, Ilana
    Ortega, Francisco
    [J]. GLOBAL PUBLIC HEALTH, 2019, 14 (10) : 1383 - 1400
  • [24] Re-Imagining Approaches to Learning and Teaching: Youth and Community Work Education Post COVID-19
    Curran, Sheila
    Gormally, Sinead
    Smith, Christine
    [J]. EDUCATION SCIENCES, 2022, 12 (03):
  • [25] Re-imagining political community: Studies in cosmopolitan democracy.
    Smith, D
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PEACE RESEARCH, 1999, 36 (05) : 607 - 608
  • [26] African women's theology and the re-imagining of community in Africa
    Maseno, Loreen
    [J]. HTS TEOLOGIESE STUDIES-THEOLOGICAL STUDIES, 2021, 77 (02):
  • [27] Re-imagining political community:: Studies in cosmopolitan democracy.
    Tesón, FR
    [J]. ETHICS, 2000, 111 (01) : 157 - 160
  • [28] Re-imagining political community: Studies in cosmopolitan democracy.
    Dalton, RJ
    [J]. POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1999, 20 (03) : 663 - 664
  • [29] Re-Imagining the Religious Beliefs and Cultural Practices of Indigenous Christian Youth
    Del Castillo, Fides A.
    [J]. RELIGIONS, 2022, 13 (06)
  • [30] A CONTESTED COMMUNITY: PRIYADAS AND THE RE-IMAGINING OF NABHADAS'S BHAKTAMAL
    Hare, James P.
    [J]. SIKH FORMATIONS-RELIGION CULTURE THEORY, 2007, 3 (02): : 185 - 198