Political Correctness and Higher Education
British and American Perspectives
By John Lea
Published November 20th 2008 by Routledge – 284 pages
Published November 20th 2008 by Routledge – 284 pages
This book is the first major study of political correctness in post compulsory education to be published in the UK. For readers in the UK unfamiliar with the nature of the controversies in US college campuses this book offers a comprehensive assessment of the key themes, including who and what was behind key campaigns. For readers in the US unfamiliar with how this cultural export has faired in the UK this book looks at the significant similarities and differences in the ways that the phrase has been used in both societies.
Apart from addressing the roots of political correctness the book seeks to show how the phrase has helped to complicate the traditional boundaries between those on the political Left and those on the political Right. The book also demonstrates in clear terms how the phrase is integral to understanding key themes in cultural theory, such as postmodernism and identity politics.
This book is intended to be of interest to a number of readers:
Finally, the book will seek to capture the reflections of prominent academics and educationalists bon both sides of the Atlantic, who have worked in environments where the phrase has impinged on aspects of their work over the last twenty five years.
If you think that `political correctness’ simply amounts to what jokes you are allowed to tell in a classroom, hopefully this book will challenge you to think again.
@contents:
Preface
Foreword: by Jonathan Zimmerman
Chapter One:
PC World:
Political Correctness and the Modern Zeitgeist
Chapter Two:
Loose Canons and Straw men of the Apocalypse:
The Conservative Campaign Against PC in the US
Chapter Three:
Look Right and Left before proceeding:
The political contours PC debate in the US
Chapter Four
Water buffaloes in Pennsylvania:
Closing Free Speech
Chapter Five
The End of Civilisation in California:
Illiberal Multiculturalism
Chapter Six
A Day at the Races in Michigan:
The Victims of Reverse Discrimination
Chapter 7
Talking about Political correctness: American conversations about political correctness and higher education
Chapter 8
Green sheep in London:
The Loony Left and British PC
Chapter 9
PC and the Panopticon Principle:
Quangos, Surveillance, and Scripted Communication in the Academy
Chapter 10
PC and the Attenuated Academy:
Social Engineering, widening participation, and professional allegiance
Chapter 11
Talking about political correctness: British conversations about political correctness and post-16 education
Chapter 12
Conclusion:
PC as Oxymoron
Bibliography
Name: Political Correctness and Higher Education: British and American Perspectives (Paperback) – Routledge
Description: By John Lea.
How many times have you heard the phrase: `it’s all political correctness gone mad!’
Do you ever wonder whether colleges and universities are really awash with trivial concerns about the use of language or whether they are actually...
Categories: Education Studies, Higher Education, Sociology of Education, Education Policy, Media & Film Studies