About this book series

Studies utilising the perspectives of postcolonial theory have become established and increasingly widespread in the last few decades. This series embraces and broadly employs the postcolonial approach. As a site of struggle, education has constituted a key vehicle for the 'colonization of the mind'. The 'post' in postcolonialism is both temporal, in the sense of emphasizing the processes of decolonization, and analytical in the sense of probing and contesting the aftermath of colonialism and the imperialism which succeeded it, utilising materialist and discourse analysis. Postcolonial theory is particularly apt for exploring the implications of educational colonialism, decolonization, experimentation, revisioning, contradiction and ambiguity not only for the former colonies, but also for the former colonial powers. This series views education as an important vehicle for both the inculcation and unlearning of colonial ideologies. It complements the diversity that exists in postcolonial studies of political economy, literature, sociology and the interdisciplinary domain of cultural studies. Education is here being viewed in its broadest contexts, and is not confined to institutionalized learning. The aim of this series is to identify and help establish new areas of educational inquiry in postcolonial studies.
Electronic ISSN
2946-2347
Print ISSN
2946-2339
Series Editor
  • Antonia Darder,
  • Anne Hickling-Hudson,
  • Peter Mayo

Book titles in this series

  1. Liberatory Practices for Learning

    Dismantling Social Inequality and Individualism with Ancient Wisdom

    Editors:
    • Julio Cammarota
    • Copyright: 2021

    Available Renditions

    • Hard cover
    • Soft cover
    • eBook