Orientations of the heart: Exploring hope & diversity in undergraduate citizenship education

This dissertation addresses the questions: How do activists sustain hope while increasingly aware of social complexity? How is agentive hope related to experiences of systemic power relations, including class, race, and gender? In a political climate increasingly circumscribed by neoliberal and neoc...

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Main Author: Henderson, Mary Hannah
Language:ENG
Published: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3498348
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spelling ndltd-UMASS-oai-scholarworks.umass.edu-dissertations-64962020-12-02T14:32:35Z Orientations of the heart: Exploring hope & diversity in undergraduate citizenship education Henderson, Mary Hannah This dissertation addresses the questions: How do activists sustain hope while increasingly aware of social complexity? How is agentive hope related to experiences of systemic power relations, including class, race, and gender? In a political climate increasingly circumscribed by neoliberal and neoconservative policies and rhetoric, the question of how scholars and teachers, both formal and informal, can support hopeful, agentive, social democratic citizens becomes critical. Employing a mixed genre format, based in an ethnographic position informed by Virginia Dominguez's "politics of love and rescue" and Hirokazu Miyazaki's "method of hope," I examine hope and its relationship to diversity and citizenship through analysis of in-depth field research conducted in undergraduate citizenship education courses. Through both traditional anthropological analysis and a full-length, ethnographically inspired novel, I explore activists' motivation, life stories, and political values, asking how their ability to sustain hope for the short term and the long term articulates with their lived experiences of systemic power relations and their visions of citizenship. Key factors in sustaining a long-term orientation toward hope include perspective-taking ("the wide angle lens"), loving relationships, and doing and reflecting on direct action, especially across social boundaries. I conclude that reflective, relational, action-focused pedagogies can effectively support diverse groups of hopeful, agentive citizens committed to progressive visions of social justice. 2012-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3498348 Doctoral Dissertations Available from Proquest ENG ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Cultural anthropology|Social studies education
collection NDLTD
language ENG
sources NDLTD
topic Cultural anthropology|Social studies education
spellingShingle Cultural anthropology|Social studies education
Henderson, Mary Hannah
Orientations of the heart: Exploring hope & diversity in undergraduate citizenship education
description This dissertation addresses the questions: How do activists sustain hope while increasingly aware of social complexity? How is agentive hope related to experiences of systemic power relations, including class, race, and gender? In a political climate increasingly circumscribed by neoliberal and neoconservative policies and rhetoric, the question of how scholars and teachers, both formal and informal, can support hopeful, agentive, social democratic citizens becomes critical. Employing a mixed genre format, based in an ethnographic position informed by Virginia Dominguez's "politics of love and rescue" and Hirokazu Miyazaki's "method of hope," I examine hope and its relationship to diversity and citizenship through analysis of in-depth field research conducted in undergraduate citizenship education courses. Through both traditional anthropological analysis and a full-length, ethnographically inspired novel, I explore activists' motivation, life stories, and political values, asking how their ability to sustain hope for the short term and the long term articulates with their lived experiences of systemic power relations and their visions of citizenship. Key factors in sustaining a long-term orientation toward hope include perspective-taking ("the wide angle lens"), loving relationships, and doing and reflecting on direct action, especially across social boundaries. I conclude that reflective, relational, action-focused pedagogies can effectively support diverse groups of hopeful, agentive citizens committed to progressive visions of social justice.
author Henderson, Mary Hannah
author_facet Henderson, Mary Hannah
author_sort Henderson, Mary Hannah
title Orientations of the heart: Exploring hope & diversity in undergraduate citizenship education
title_short Orientations of the heart: Exploring hope & diversity in undergraduate citizenship education
title_full Orientations of the heart: Exploring hope & diversity in undergraduate citizenship education
title_fullStr Orientations of the heart: Exploring hope & diversity in undergraduate citizenship education
title_full_unstemmed Orientations of the heart: Exploring hope & diversity in undergraduate citizenship education
title_sort orientations of the heart: exploring hope & diversity in undergraduate citizenship education
publisher ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
publishDate 2012
url https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3498348
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