From Below in Theory, from Above in Practice: Whites Provide Dakota Perspectives
This chapter completes analysis of the two-panel fulcrum designed to balance settler and Dakota perspectives in the Conflict and Remembrance traveling exhibit commemorating Minnesota’s U.S.-Dakota War of 1862 during its 2012 sesquicentennial. Looking clos
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Critical Social Justice Education and the Assault on Truth in White Public Pedagogy “This book takes up the recent call to clearly explicate the ways in which public pedagogies actually work. Lybeck provides a clear analysis of how White public pedagogies operate by presenting excellent data, including observations in classrooms, interviews with students, letters to the editor, public speeches, and more, to show how particular White points of view come to be seen as natural and normal, and how they continue to perpetuate systems of White privilege.” —Jennifer A. Sandlin, Professor, Department of Justice and Social Inquiry, School of Transformation, Arizona State University, USA “Rick Lybeck’s book about the mass execution of thirty-eight Dakota men in Mankato, Minnesota in 1862 and the ways the event has been effaced by a rhetoric of ‘fairness’ to both sides vividly reminds us that justice is an action that rights a wrong and thus requires a moral judgment. The lesson is as timely today as it has ever been.” —James Paul Gee, Mary Lou Fulton Professor of Literacy Studies and Regents’ Professor, Arizona State University, USA “How does one develop an appropriate and effective pedagogy of the privileged, one that would educate white American students into recognizing their country’s white-supremacist history and motivating them to help bring about a racially just nation in the future? Lybeck’s detailed and compelling account of his efforts to challenge conventional Minnesota white-settler framings of the 1862 US-Dakota War provides both a sobering realization of the multiple obstacles to such an undertaking and a valuable and inspirational guidebook, nonetheless, from which educators across the country can learn and continue striving for that laudable goal.” —Charles Mills, Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, Graduate Center at the City University of New York (CUNY), USA “This is a painful, brilliant account of yet another ugly chapter in the history of the American genocidal treatment of Native Americans. Lybeck’s critical pedagogy calls for a critique of the practices that keep the violent past alive. A must read.” —Norman K. Denzin, Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Research Professor Emeritus of Media and Cinema Studies, University of Illinois, USA
“Lybeck’s grain of sand is a short, month-long college course on the US-Dakota War of 1862. And he helps us see the world in it—including how, in classroom and white-settler public pedagogies, the war against Indigenous peoples continues under the banners of neutrality, objectivity, fairness, and balance. Lybeck’s book is startling for its intellectual and moral clarity. Please read it.” —Timothy J. Lensmire, Professor, Department of Curriculum and Instruction, University of Minnesota, USA, and author of White Folks: Race and Identity in Rural America (2017) “In a moment when the defense of white supremacy and the attack on teaching truths about injustices and anti-oppressive struggle are blatant and vicious, it might be easy to overlook the subtle, everyday, nor
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