An edited collection that traces new avenues for building liberatory
structures of knowledge inside academia
Current global trends suggest a time of exciting possibility for
scholars as critical, community-engaged, and participatory
epistemologies come to the fore.
Yet, just as possibilities invite academics to broaden and deepen
scholarship in ways unimagined a decade before, a parallel shift towards
a neoliberal and accountability-focused culture - both in the academy
and in society - imperils every new opportunity.
In Dissident Knowledge, Noam Chomsky, Linda Tuhiwai Smith, Yvonna S.
Lincoln, and others delve into the effects of colonialism,
neoliberalism, and audit culture on higher education. They present
promising avenues of resistance and show how to shape, reinvent, and
construct life for faculty in institutions that serve as both a safe
harbour and enforcer.