Table of Contents:
“…Foreword to the
Series: (Re)Constructing Memory: School Textbooks, Identity, and the Pedagogies and Politics of Imagining Community -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Section 1: Nation-Building Projects in the Aftermath of Intimate Conflict -- What Framing Analysis Can Teach Us about History Textbooks, Peace, and Conflict: The Case of Rwanda -- Ideologies Inside Textbooks: Vietnamization and Re-Khmerization of Political Education in Cambodia during the 1980s -- Construction(s) of the Nation in Egyptian Textbooks: Towards an
Understanding of Societal Conflict -- Section 2: Colonialism, Imperialism, and Their Enduring Conflict Legacies -- Creating a Nation without a Past: Secondary-School Curricula and the Teaching of National History in Uganda -- From "Civilizing Force" to "Source of Backwardness": Spanish Colonialism in Latin American School Textbooks -- The Crusades in English History Textbooks 1799-2002: Some Criteria for Textbook Improvement and Representations of Conflict -- History Education, Domestic Narratives, and China's International Behavior -- Section 3: Interaction and Integration in Divided Societies -- Addressing Conflict and Tolerance through the Curriculum -- Learning to Think Historically through a Conflict-Based Biethnic Collaborative Learning Environment -- Section 4: The Democratic Role of Schools as Mediating Institutions in Society -- Living with Ghosts, Living Otherwise: Pedagogies of Haunting in Post-Genocide Cambodia -- When War Enters the Classroom: An Ethnographic Study of Social Relationships Among School Community Members on the Colombian-Ecuadorian Border -- From Truth to Textbook: The Peruvian Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Educational Resources, and the Challenges of Teaching about Recent Conflict -- Nation, Supranational Communities, and the Globe: Unifying and Dividing Concepts of Collective Identities in History Textbooks -- Index.…”
Call Number: LB3045 .R434 2017
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