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Critical Response to Paulette Regan's An Unsettling Pedagogy of History and Hope

Decent Essays

In “Unsettling the Settler Within: Indian Residential Schools, Truth Telling, and Reconciliation in Canada,” Paulette Regan writes about An Unsettling Pedagogy of History and Hope to which I have chosen to respond critically. I have selected Regan’s work because she presents a multitude of ideas from various educators, scholars and activists about decolonization, but also this intriguing issue of finding critical hope. I was engaged with the reading as I jotted down annotations while beginning to form more of an understanding for what started out in this course as not much more than something represented by the keyword “assimilation.” For the purposes of this paper I will summarize and address what I feel is important from the reading to …show more content…

Frideres and Rene R. Gadacz. “Whiteness” is described as being a new form of racism that is covert and structural. This idea is particularly of interest to me as all other people other than whites are considered “raced,” which would include me as I am from Asian descent. Whites are not racially seen or named and therefore function as the “human norm” (Frideres and Gadacz 9). Even now, Caucasians are often unaware of their own “white privilege” and the whiteness remains invisible to them. This poses an overarching dilemma of stratifying whites and non-whites which is due to the structural arrangements already embedded in our society today. The tricky matter here is that while white privilege operates as an invisible force, Aboriginal peoples and other minorities that do not fit the norm are rarely represented in media and more importantly, the educational curriculum. What can be done when white privilege has been ingrained into society as the norm? How do we start from scratch and restructure whole relationships and change perspectives? In order to reorganize societal dynamics and overcome this perpetuating cycle of colonialism, we may have to form new identities and – as dismal as this sounds – just does not seem possible.
But all is not lost. There is that lasting critical hope that still exists if we can approach it in the right way so that it is nurtured and grows. Instead of repeated apologies and “first”

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