1st Edition

Disturbing Pleasures Learning Popular Culture

By Henry A. Giroux Copyright 1994

    In Disturbing Pleasures Henry Giroux demonstrates how his well-known theories of education, critical pedagogy and popular culture can be put to use in the classroom and in other cultural settings. Adding an entirely new dimension to his thinking about the cultural sites at which pedagogical practice takes place, Giroux illustrates how professors, school teachers and other cultural workers can appropriate what he refers to as a "pedagogy of cultural studies."

    Part 1 DISNEY BENEITON, AND BEYOND; Chapter 1 Consuming Social Change: The United Colors of Benetlon; Chapter 2 Politics and Innocence in the Wonderful World of Disney; Chapter 3 Schools for Scandal: Whittling Away at Public Education; Chapter 4 White Utopias and Nightmare Realities: Film and the New Cultural Racism; Chapter 5 Pedagogy and the Critical Practice of Photography, Roger I. Simon; Part 2 CULTURAL STUDIES AND PEDAGOGICAL STRATEGIES; Chapter 6 The Turn Toward Theory; Chapter 7 Does Anybody Write in the Cultural Studies Classroom?; Chapter 8 Paulo Freire and the Rise of the Border Intellectual; Chapter 9 Traveling Pedagogies;

    Biography

    books include Border Crossings and Between Borders (with Peter McLaren), both available from Routledge.

    "Henry Giroux's new book is brilliant and fascinating. A valuable instrument in sorting through the indoctrinational labyrinth of our culture. I hope that it's widely read." -- Jonathan Kozol, author of Savage Inequalities
    "Disturbing Pleasures rewrites the relationship between pedagogy and popular culture in a unique and original way. . . Disturbing Pleasures is a book that combines the insights of critical pedagogy, popular culture and cultural studies by bridging the relationhip bwetween theory and practice in aseries of analyses. Being one of the few books to expand the notion of critical pedagogy to the sphere of the popular as it works in and out of schools, and by both defining and demonstarating how critical pedagogy can be applied to cultural texts, this book will prove invaluable to a vast array of educators." -- Pepi Leistyna, Harvard Educational Review
    "Once again, Henry Giroux presents a thoughtful piece on critical pedagogy, schooling and popular culture. . . a penetrating analysis. . ." -- The Journal of Educational Thought
    "[Disturbing Pleasures] provides an insight into the ways on which professors, school teachers and other cultural workers can appropriate a pedagogy of cultural studies." -- Leisure, Recreation and Touring Abstract