SUBJUGATED KNOWLEDGE AND THE POTENTIAL TO FOSTER CHANGES IN STUDENTS’ ATTITUDES TOWARDS HISTORY AND THEIR WORLD VIEW: A CASE STUDY IN AN AMERICAN HISTORY CLASS

Authors

  • Le Thanh Hai Cao Author
  • Phuoc Quy Chau Duong Author
  • Anh Huy Pham Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63506/jilc.0603.84

Keywords:

subjugated knowledge, attitudes, different ways of thinking, epistemology, history

Abstract

The concept of subjugated knowledge suggested by Foucault (1980) has been rigorously studied and applied by educators and scholars across disciplines in an effort to devise a transformative education approach that embraces multifaceted nature of knowledge, and simultaneously challenge the authority of the dominant epistemology. This paper presents the preliminary results of an experimental study in an American History class, in which subjugated knowledge is incorporated with an attempt to enable students to ‘think differently’ and to question the reality constructed in mainstream history textbooks. Findings reveal that regardless of the initial difficulties in familiarizing themselves with the concept and the practice, students are enthusiastically engaged throughout the process and signs of changes (though still modest) have been identified in the analysis of their final papers. 

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2022-12-30

Issue

Section

JOURNAL OF INQUIRY INTO LANGUAGES AND CULTURES

How to Cite

SUBJUGATED KNOWLEDGE AND THE POTENTIAL TO FOSTER CHANGES IN STUDENTS’ ATTITUDES TOWARDS HISTORY AND THEIR WORLD VIEW: A CASE STUDY IN AN AMERICAN HISTORY CLASS. (2022). JOURNAL OF INQUIRY INTO LANGUAGES AND CULTURES, 6(3), 337-346. https://doi.org/10.63506/jilc.0603.84

Similar Articles

11-20 of 66

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.