Abstracts
Abstract
This essay places David Graeber’s consistent focus on imagination and possibilities into conversation with social studies education. In a sociopolitical climate characterized by neoliberalism, militarized borders, and political censorship of social studies teaching and learning in P-12 schools, it is crucial that social studies teachers and teacher educators in the United States, Canada, and elsewhere continue to engage in pedagogies that are critical and responsive, providing students with representations of the past and present that, rather than reproducing the status quo, playfully imagine alternative futures that are more equitable, just, and free. Building from Graeber’s work in direct civic action, this essay offers ideas for how standardized social studies concepts can be reconfigured in affecting, life-giving ways.
Keywords:
- social studies education,
- citizenship,
- civics education,
- democracy,
- David Graeber,
- critical education,
- debt
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Appendices
Biographical note
Peter M Nelson is an Assistant Professor of Teaching in the Department of Curriculum and Pedagogy at the University of British Columbia. His current research explores teaching life from lenses of relationality and aesthetics, as well as how practicing teachers and teacher candidates approach curriculum design from critical posthumanist perspectives.