ABSTRACT

In this book, the authors’ post-capitalist approach to change focuses less on what we need to dismantle and more on what educators and activists are building in its place. Studying schools and other social organizations in the Global North and South, the authors identify and examine some of the most interesting counterhegemonic spaces in both formal and informal education today.

They view these spaces through a lens of what Gloria Anzaldua and Homi Bhabha call borderlands or "third spaces." These third spaces are created in-between our lived cultural and social identities (first space) and the dominant culture that seeks to define us (second space). This book seeks to better understand how these third spaces conceive of learning, how they are created, the range of experiences among them, the obstacles they face, how they are sustained over time, and how they have built global networks of solidarity. The creation of global networks of third spaces not only signals a shift in progressive political strategy but also an expansion of what counts as spaces that are educational.

This book is well suited to graduate and upper-level undergraduate courses in politics of education, sociology of education, education policy, as well as the humanities, sociology, political science, and the arts.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|24 pages

Third Spaces of Learning

Characteristics and Conceptual Groundings

chapter 2|18 pages

The Controversial Legacy of State Schooling

Is a Third Space Possible?

chapter 3|24 pages

Born Out of Struggle

Third Spaces with/in/Against the State

chapter 5|22 pages

Pedagogies of Memory

chapter 6|21 pages

Social Movement and Activist Learning

Theory and Praxis

chapter 7|17 pages

Relearning Solidarity

Building Networks of Third Spaces for Post-Capitalism

chapter 8|10 pages

Epilogue