XWe have detected your location as outside the U.S/Canada, if you think this is wrong, you can choose your location.

Palgrave Macmillan

Immigration and the Challenge of Education

A Social Drama Analysis in South Central Los Angeles

ISBN 9780230338272
Publication Date December 2011
Formats Paperback Hardcover Ebook (PDF) Ebook (EPUB) 
Publisher Palgrave Macmillan
Series Education, Politics and Public Life

Part enthnograpy and part testimony, this book analyzes a school setting and community from the standpoint of a group of immigrant mothers (las madres) in South Central Los Angeles who were concerned about the education of their children and the violence in their communities. Written in both the first and third person, in Spanish and English, the text brings together the women's dialogue and observations of the world around them as they embarked on an oftentimes conflicting process of putting into action their developing political consciousness. The social drama of the school and community is revealed through their change and advocacy.

Nathalia E. Jaramillo, formerly an assistant professor in the Department of Educational Studies at Purdue University, is a senior lecturer in the Faculty of Education, University of Auckland, New Zealand.

The Social Drama of Mirasur
Setting the Stage: The School-Community Borderland 
The Pedagogy of the Burro
The Breach
Inner Theater: Social Drama as Shifting Consciousness
Anti-Structure and Communitas
Revolutionary Social Drama: De-colonial Pedagogical Processes

Downloads

Reviews

'Immigration and the Challenge of Education addresses one of the most pressing educational challenges that the United States faces in the twenty-first century: The education of an ever-increasing immigrant student population under siege. The brilliance of Jaramillo's book lies in her powerful analysis of the historical roots that cut across borders and are linked by exploitative imperialistic economic and cultural policies that guide and shape the asymmetrical relationship between North and South. This book goes beyond the usual documentation of the discrimination faced by Latina mothers. It provides a compassionate portrayal of the emergence of submerged voices and the multiple processes involved in the empowerment of Latina mothers and the varied degrees to which they come to voice as narrated by their own stories.' —Donaldo Macedo, Distinguished Professor of Liberal Arts and Education, University of Massachusetts Boston
'This is a truly groundbreaking text, not only 'breaching' the borders of North and South but also seamlessly navigating the terrains of American, Latino, Native American/Indigenous, Ethic, Qualitative, and Gender and Women's Studies. Jaramillo weaves a critical, insightful analysis with beautifully written narrative, creating a new genre of scholarship that not only contests the dictates of colonialist consciousness but also its forms. Given the ascendency of the colonial present, this book is an absolute must read for students and scholars across disciplines. This book inspires me—as a scholar, activist and educator—to keep struggling for the decolonial imaginary and all its possibilities.' —Sandy Grande, Chair of Education Department, Associate Professor of Education, Connecticut College
'I love this book! Drawing on her close engagement with the activist work of immigrant mothers in South Central L.A., Jaramillo brilliantly blends theory with praxis and develops an innovative approach to revolutionary social drama as multi-layered pragmatic transformation. This book represents an important development in Anzaldúan studies, holistic-critical pedagogies, and decolonial theories.' —AnaLouise Keating, Professor of Women's Studies, Texas Woman's University
Add a review

Related titles