Toward Critical Multimodality

Theory, Research, and Practicein Transformative Educational Spaces

Katarina Silvestri|Nichole Barrett|Tiffany M. Nyachae
Emerald
Emerald

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Paperback / softback
9798887302485
16 June 2023
£50.00
Hardback
9798887302492
16 June 2023
£85.00
eBook (ePub)
9781806601837
16 June 2023
£50.00
eBook (PDF)
9798887302508
16 June 2023
£50.00

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  • Description
  • Contents

This edited volume seeks to answer the question, “What does it mean to be a critical multimodal scholar in educational spaces?” Toward Critical Multimodality highlights how choices made throughout multimodal design and research processes are critically-oriented and inextricably linked to power. We show how social semiotics and multimodality inform engagement with criticality in educational spaces through questioning dominant narratives (e.g., white, cisheteropatriarchal, ableist, classist perspectives), exploring relationships between selves and space, problematizing and reimagining educational practices, and dreaming of educational futures that are just, anti-oppressive, and with room for all to thrive while learning.

These chapters demonstrate how studying multiple modalities in interaction (e.g., image, writing, color, spatial layout, gaze, proxemics, gestures) can reveal how power operates, provide students with opportunities to explore themselves and their identities with respect to power, and provide a vehicle for scholars to disrupt and transform oppressive educational practices. Furthermore, multiple chapters show alternative ways to display, construct and share knowledge as transformative pedagogical practice in learning environments. We reframe social semiotics and multimodality as an integral part of decentering dominant ideas of power and what “counts” as purposeful meaning making by highlighting how criticality and multimodality integrate theoretically and methodologically.

Prologue: AERA Chairs Introductory Remarks April 22, 2022 in Session Toward Critical Multimodality: Exploring Theory, Research, and Practice in Transformative Educational Spaces; Katarina N. Silvestri, Nichole Barrett, Tiffany M. Nyachae.

  • Acknowledgments.
  • Chapter 1. Troubling, Disrupting, and Reimagining Educational Spaces: The Need for Critical Multimodality Now; Katarina N. Silvestri, Nichole Barrett, and Tiffany M. Nyachae.
  • Section I: Theorizing For Critical Multimodality.
  • Chapter 2. Multimodal Meaning Making in a Pandemic: Visions From the Multilingual Periphery as Epicenter; Eunjeong Lee, Sara P. Alvarez, Laura Gonzales, and Amy J. Wan.
  • Chapter 3. Proceduralized Ideologies in Video Games and Playable Media; Earl Aguilera, Jeffrey B. Holmes, Kelly M. Tran, and Lynette D. Guzmán.
  • Chapter 4. Meet Me in Outer Space: Theorizing Fugitive Spaces of Creation and Joy With Girls of Color; Autumn A. Griffin and Grace D. Player.
  • Chapter 5. Multimodality as Accessibility: A Critical Perspective of Universal Design in Theory, Research, and Practice; Kyesha M. Isadore and Angélica Galván.
  • Section II: Critical Multimodality And Storytelling For Agency And Revisioning.
  • Chapter 6. All the Stars Are Closer: Black Girl Multimodal Practices for Time Traveling in a Dystopian World; ThedaMarie Gibbs Grey, Jennifer D. Turner, and Alexis Morgan Young.
  • Chapter 7. Black Joy, Love, and Resistance: Using Digital Storytelling to Center Black Students' Full Humanity; Davena Jackson.
  • Chapter 8. It Starts With a (Digital) Story: Agentive Inquiry Through Digital Storytelling; Andrea N. Franyutti-Boyles, Sara Cooper, and Gregory Ramí­rez.
  • Section III: Critical Multimodality For Reimagining Curriculum.
  • Chapter 9. Don't Tell Me It's Not Research: Using Multimodal Critical Inquiry Projects to Disrupt the Deficits in the Traditional ELA Paper; Sarah M. Fleming.
  • Chapter 10. The Plat and the Gavel: Multimodal Critical Family History in Rural Teacher Education; William S. Davis and Vicki Mokuria.
  • Chapter 11. Critical Multimodality at the Museum: How a Community-University Partnership Supports Transformative Praxis; Matthew R. Deroo.
  • Section IV: Critical Multimodality In Protests And Social Movements.
  • Chapter 12. Bordados: A Feminist Collective Practice of Resistance and Solidarity in the Chilean Estallido; Romina S. Peña-Pincheira, M. Isidora Bilbao-Nieva, and Lau Romero-Quintana.
  • Chapter 13. Post-it, Milk Tea, and Mini-Stonehenge: Making Sense of the Multimodality of Protest Artifacts in 2019-2020 Hong Kong Protest Movement; Jason Man-Bo Ho.
  • Chapter 14. Disrupting Discourses in Place: Youth, Space, and Activism; Amy Walker.
  • Chapter 15. Epilogue; Mary B. McVee.
  • About the Editors.
  • About the Contributors.