Unfixing knowledges : queering the literacy curriculum
conference contribution
posted on 2007-01-01, 00:00authored byChristopher Walsh
In the literacy classroom, students have few opportunities to use their literacy practices to contest narratives of race, class, gender and sexuality. Instead, extensive time is spent completing literacy activities associated with what “good” readers and writers do. Students’ literacy practices are often formulaic, repetitive, and serve classroom management strategies producing a mythic narrative of good literacy teaching. This paper introduces a queer literacy curriculum that poses pedagogy as a series of questions: What does being taught, what does knowledge do to students? How does knowledge become understood in the relationship between teacher/text and student? (Lusted, 1986) It emphasizes developing critical analyses of heterosexism, heteronormativity and normativity with the goal of helping students understand binary categories are not givens, rather social constructions we are often forced to perform (Butler, 1990) through available discourses. The paper highlights an interruption into the literacy curriculum where, through collective memory work, students investigated, analysed and contested the usually-not-noticed ways a small understanding of heterosexuality has come to structure their lives.
History
Event
Australian Association for Research in Education International Education Research. Conference (2007 : Fremantle, W. A.)
Pagination
1 - 24
Publisher
Australian Association for Research in Education
Location
Fremantle, Western Australia
Place of publication
Melbourne, Vic.
Start date
2007-11-25
End date
2007-11-29
Language
eng
Publication classification
E1 Full written paper - refereed
Copyright notice
2007, AARE
Editor/Contributor(s)
P Jeffery
Title of proceedings
AARE 2007 : Australian Association for Research in Education International Education Research Conference ‘Research impacts : proving or improving?’