While the issue of boys’ dominance of the curriculum has a long history, the paper examines this phenomenon in a contemporary context, through an empirical study with female teachers designing English curriculum around girls’ media in a coeducational secondary school in Victoria, Australia. In this space, teachers, and the researcher, produce and perform both individual gendered identities and plans for the identities of future student subjects, while negotiating subject positions made available to girls and women in broader social contexts. In this instance, negotiations that take place during the development of a unit of work on Mattel’s Barbie website form the basis of feminist discourse analysis, enabling us to ‘take stock’ in thinking about what curriculum design is, about where the past is situated in relation to the present, and to question why, within a discursive feminist/postfeminist entanglement, the heritage of feminist intellectual thought in this area seems absent.
History
Chapter number
12
Pagination
unknown-unknown
ISBN-13
9780367135775
Edition
1st
Language
eng
Notes
This chapter is adapted from a special issue journal article of the same name. The article was selected for the special issue, but could not be published in it for reasons of space. It is, however, included in this book length version of the special issue.
Publication classification
BN Other book chapter, or book chapter not attributed to Deakin
Copyright notice
2019, Taylor & Francis
Extent
13
Editor/Contributor(s)
Edwards Williams KT, Baszile DT, Guillory NA
Publisher
Routledge
Place of publication
Abingdon, Eng.
Title of book
Black Women Theorizing Curriculum Studies in Colour and Curves