ABSTRACT

Art and Social Justice Education offers inspiration and tools for educators to craft critical, meaningful, and transformative arts education curriculum and arts integration projects. The images, descriptive texts, essays, and resources are grounded within a clear social justice framework and linked to ideas about culture as commons. Essays and a section written by and for teachers who have already incorporated contemporary artists and ideas into their curriculums help readers to imagine ways to use the content in their own settings. This book is enhanced by a Companion Website (www.routledge.com/cw/quinn) featuring artists and artworks, project examples, and dialogue threads for educators.

Proposing that art can contribute in a wide range of ways to the work of envisioning and making a more just world, this imaginative, practical, and engaging sourcebook of contemporary artists’ works and education resources advances the field of arts education, locally, nationally, and internationally, by moving beyond models of discipline-based or expressive art education. It will be welcomed by all educators seeking to include the arts and social justice in their curricula.

chapter

Editors' Introduction

It's a Movement, So Start Moving: Art Education for Social Justice

part I|46 pages

The Commons

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

Yours as Much as Mine

chapter 1|3 pages

Justseeds

An Artists' Cooperative

chapter 2|2 pages

Heidi Cody

Letters to the World and the ABCs of Visual Culture

chapter 3|3 pages

Kutiman

chapter 4|3 pages

Torolab

Border Research Gone Molecular

chapter 5|2 pages

Mequitta Ahuja

Afrogalaxy

chapter 6|3 pages

Emily Jacir

The Intersection of Art and Politics

chapter 7|3 pages

Paula Nicho Cúmez

Crossing Borders

chapter 8|3 pages

Rafael Trelles

Cleaning Up the Stain of Militarism

chapter 9|7 pages

Experience, Discover, Interpret, and Communicate

Material Culture Studies and Social Justice in Art Education

chapter 10|6 pages

Educational Crisis

An Artistic Intervention

chapter 11|6 pages

Social Media/Social Justice

The (Creative) Commons and K-12 Art Education

part II|48 pages

Our Cultures

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

Build Something Fresh

chapter 12|3 pages

Kaisa Leka

Confusing the Disability/Ability Divide

chapter 13|3 pages

Darrel Morris

Men Don't Sew in Public

chapter 14|3 pages

Nicholas Galanin

Imaginary Indian and the Indigenous Gaze

chapter 15|3 pages

Kimsooja

The Performance of Universality

chapter 16|3 pages

Xu Bing

Words of Art

chapter 17|3 pages

Bernard Williams

Art as Reinterpretation, Identity as Art

chapter 18|3 pages

Hock E Aye VI Edgar Heap of Birds

Beyond the Chief

chapter 19|2 pages

Samuel Fosso

Queering Performances of Realness

chapter 22|6 pages

Pedagogy, Collaboration, and Transformation

A Conversation with Brett Cook

part III|48 pages

Toward Futures

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

The Next Big Thing

chapter 23|3 pages

Harrell Fletcher

Shaping a New Social

chapter 24|3 pages

Pinky & Bunny

Critical Pedagogy 2.0

chapter 25|3 pages

LA Pocha Nostra

Practicing Mere Life

chapter 26|3 pages

Future Farmers

Leaping Over the Impossible Present

chapter 27|3 pages

Appalshop

Learning from Rural Youth Media

chapter 28|3 pages

Navjot Altaf

What Public, Whose Art?

chapter 29|3 pages

The Chiapas Photography Project

You Can't Unsee It

chapter 30|2 pages

Dilomprizulike

Art as Political Agency

chapter 31|7 pages

In Search of Clean Water and Critical Environmental Justice

Collaborative Artistic Responses Through the Possibilities of Sustainability and Appropriate Technologies

chapter 33|7 pages

Story Drawings

Revisiting Personal Struggles, Empathizing with “Others”

part IV|41 pages

Voices of Teachers