This article suggests an imagining of textbooks as sites oscillating between three different but interrelated archives: the national, the international, and the global. Any textbook, it is argued, draws on themes and perspectives from these three archives and this hybridization of the textbook produces ambivalence. Unclear and ambivalent messages in the textbook are signs of difficulties in accommodating the competing narratives of community and identity that are constituted in the national, the international, and the global. This specific approach to textbooks is discussed with examples of social studies textbooks from England and Greece, especially history textbooks
The aim of this research is primarily to examine and explore how imperialism/colonialism is depicted...
This book attempts a critical examination of the current history teaching programmes in a number of ...
Textbooks’ prominent role in education makes their content and how they present it interesting to in...
This article suggests an imagining of textbooks as sites oscillating between three different but int...
Many have noted the rise of the global in academic and popular discourse. We ask how this global fra...
Textbooks can change, shape, and affect the formation of identity of those who learn the target lang...
This thesis focuses on how social studies textbooks, authorized for use in Canadian classrooms, port...
In this paper we provide a multimodal account of historical changes in secondary school textbooks in...
National narratives have often served to mobilize the masses for war by providing myths and distorte...
This essay gives an overview of major trends in history and social studies textbook research focusin...
Abstract The study of history through school textbooks arguably is still the predominant medium for ...
Abstract In many nations debates over the content and format of school textbooks are sites of educat...
Textbooks in history, geography and the social sciences provide important insights into the ways in ...
Exploring how the information flow of social studies textbook spreads is negotiated in teacher-led i...
The comparative approach offers a particularly rich prospect for the study of textbooks, which are v...
The aim of this research is primarily to examine and explore how imperialism/colonialism is depicted...
This book attempts a critical examination of the current history teaching programmes in a number of ...
Textbooks’ prominent role in education makes their content and how they present it interesting to in...
This article suggests an imagining of textbooks as sites oscillating between three different but int...
Many have noted the rise of the global in academic and popular discourse. We ask how this global fra...
Textbooks can change, shape, and affect the formation of identity of those who learn the target lang...
This thesis focuses on how social studies textbooks, authorized for use in Canadian classrooms, port...
In this paper we provide a multimodal account of historical changes in secondary school textbooks in...
National narratives have often served to mobilize the masses for war by providing myths and distorte...
This essay gives an overview of major trends in history and social studies textbook research focusin...
Abstract The study of history through school textbooks arguably is still the predominant medium for ...
Abstract In many nations debates over the content and format of school textbooks are sites of educat...
Textbooks in history, geography and the social sciences provide important insights into the ways in ...
Exploring how the information flow of social studies textbook spreads is negotiated in teacher-led i...
The comparative approach offers a particularly rich prospect for the study of textbooks, which are v...
The aim of this research is primarily to examine and explore how imperialism/colonialism is depicted...
This book attempts a critical examination of the current history teaching programmes in a number of ...
Textbooks’ prominent role in education makes their content and how they present it interesting to in...