Schooling the National Imagination: Education, English, and the Indian Modern
What is the nature of textbooks produced by a postcolonial society and how do they shape the national citizen? How do they define social roles in society, and influence the way people look at themselves and others? In what way do textbooks reflect the framing visions about societal change? By exploring how language is critical to the development of a postcolonial nation and its shifting responses to global modernity, Schooling the National Imagination reflects on these profoundly important questions. Discussing the national education policy in general and the English language policy in particular, Shalini Advani tracks the inner dilemmas of a postcolonial society like India and the troubled history of its language politics. She looks at state-produced school textbooks, traces how English curriculum both reflects and constructs identity in particular ways, and examines classroom practice in schools. Advani goes on to consider the ways in which ideology shapes pedagogic practice, and how classroom transactions define the meaning of what is taught. Sensitive to theoretical discussions on how power and culture are made visible in textbooks and practice, the book moves between study of policy, textbooks, and classroom ethnography to provide a richly textured account of what language education does.
1102436577
Schooling the National Imagination: Education, English, and the Indian Modern
What is the nature of textbooks produced by a postcolonial society and how do they shape the national citizen? How do they define social roles in society, and influence the way people look at themselves and others? In what way do textbooks reflect the framing visions about societal change? By exploring how language is critical to the development of a postcolonial nation and its shifting responses to global modernity, Schooling the National Imagination reflects on these profoundly important questions. Discussing the national education policy in general and the English language policy in particular, Shalini Advani tracks the inner dilemmas of a postcolonial society like India and the troubled history of its language politics. She looks at state-produced school textbooks, traces how English curriculum both reflects and constructs identity in particular ways, and examines classroom practice in schools. Advani goes on to consider the ways in which ideology shapes pedagogic practice, and how classroom transactions define the meaning of what is taught. Sensitive to theoretical discussions on how power and culture are made visible in textbooks and practice, the book moves between study of policy, textbooks, and classroom ethnography to provide a richly textured account of what language education does.
27.99 In Stock
Schooling the National Imagination: Education, English, and the Indian Modern

Schooling the National Imagination: Education, English, and the Indian Modern

by Shalini Advani
Schooling the National Imagination: Education, English, and the Indian Modern

Schooling the National Imagination: Education, English, and the Indian Modern

by Shalini Advani

eBook

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Overview

What is the nature of textbooks produced by a postcolonial society and how do they shape the national citizen? How do they define social roles in society, and influence the way people look at themselves and others? In what way do textbooks reflect the framing visions about societal change? By exploring how language is critical to the development of a postcolonial nation and its shifting responses to global modernity, Schooling the National Imagination reflects on these profoundly important questions. Discussing the national education policy in general and the English language policy in particular, Shalini Advani tracks the inner dilemmas of a postcolonial society like India and the troubled history of its language politics. She looks at state-produced school textbooks, traces how English curriculum both reflects and constructs identity in particular ways, and examines classroom practice in schools. Advani goes on to consider the ways in which ideology shapes pedagogic practice, and how classroom transactions define the meaning of what is taught. Sensitive to theoretical discussions on how power and culture are made visible in textbooks and practice, the book moves between study of policy, textbooks, and classroom ethnography to provide a richly textured account of what language education does.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199088126
Publisher: OUP India
Publication date: 09/02/2009
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 331 KB

About the Author

Shalini Advani is currently Director of Education at Learn Today in India. She is National Steering Committee member for the National Council for Educational Research and Training (NCERT) for developing a national curriculum on language and writing textbooks, and she was Principal at The British School in New Delhi.

Table of Contents

List of Abbreviations
Introduction
Part 1: The Policy Landscape
Becoming True Indians: Language, History, Modernity
Language and the Postcolonial Predicament
Education for Nationalism
Part 2: The Culture of Textbooks
Constructing the Nation
Normalizing Boundaries
En-gendering the Nation
Part 3: Entering the School Gates
Using Texts: An Ethnography of the Classroom
Part 3: Conclusion
Nationalist Pedagogy, Sub-National Identities, Transnational Desires
Bibliography
List of Abbreviations
Introduction

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