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2019 | 10 | 2 | 101 – 121

Article title

CULTURAL DEMOCRACY AND SCHOOLING IN INDIA: A SUBALTERN PERSPECTIVE

Authors

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
It is argued that educational spaces often maintain certain forms of hierarchical cultural patterns to reproduce an unequal civil society. The history and contemporary nature of Indian civil society, ridden with relations of caste and class, often interpellate its agenda of hierarchical order in the cultures of schooling. Children from marginalized communities, particularly from the Adivasi (tribal) cultures, are more vulnerable to these undercurrents, and this often results in their dispirited autonomous participation in schooling. The content and nature of the curriculum and modes of pedagogical interactions are the focal channels of its operationalization. In recent times and earlier, various forms of contestations had emerged against this dominant agenda, particularly from subaltern contexts. These took the form of democratic resistances seeking to establish democratic cultures in classrooms and schools (Apple C James, 2007; Darder et.al, 2009). Creating a sphere of this order would promise to enable children to become transformative human beings and autonomous intellectuals. Viewing the regime of education as both liberal and oppressive (McLaren, 2009), this paper is an attempt to engage with democratic concerns in the realm of schooling in India within the relations of culture, knowledge and its politics.

Year

Volume

10

Issue

2

Pages

101 – 121

Physical description

Contributors

author
  • Tuljapur Campus, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, School of Rural Development, Maharashtra, India

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-21abf51d-c23f-4a36-a31d-2338c3da1c7b
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