'Henry Giroux', born
September 18 1943 in
Providence, is a US cultural critic. He is one of the founding theorists of
critical pedagogy in the
United States, and is best known for his pioneering work in public
pedagogy,
cultural studies,
youth studies,
higher education,
media studies, and
critical theory.
A high school teacher in
Barrington, Rhode Island for nine years, Giroux has held positions at
Boston University,
Miami University, and
Penn State University. In 2005, Giroux's arrival as the Global TV Network Chair in English and Cultural Studies at
McMaster University in
Hamilton, Ontario was hailed as a success for the University
[1], and was admired by colleges across
Canada.
[2].
Giroux has published more than 35 books and 300 academic articles, and is published widely throughout education and cultural studies literature.
[3] Since that arriving at McMaster, Giroux has been a featured faculty lecturer
[4], and has published nine books,
[5] including his most recent work, ''The University in Chains: Confronting the Military-Industrial-Academic Complex''.
[6]
Routledge named Giroux as one of the top fifty educational thinkers of the modern period in 2002.
[7]
Biography
Henry Giroux was born in
Providence, Rhode Island. After teaching high school history in
Barrington, Rhode Island for six years, Giroux earned his doctorate at
Carnegie-Mellon in 1977. His first position as a professor was in education at
Boston University, which he held for the next six years. Following that he became an education professor and renowned scholar in residence at
Miami University in
Oxford, Ohio. While there he also served as the founding Director of the Center for Education and Cultural Studies.
[8]
In 1992 he began a 12-year position in the Waterbury Chair Professorship at
Penn State University, also serving as the Director of the Waterbury Forum in Education and Cultural Studies.
[9] In 2004 Giroux became the Global Television Network Chair in English and Cultural Studies at
McMaster University in
Hamilton, Ontario.
[10] He currently lives there with his wife, Dr. Susan Searls Giroux.
Theory
Giroux is widely recognized as tremendously influential in the field of education and considered by many to rank among the leading intellectuals in the world.
[11] He is widely associated with the
Critical Theory tradition in
education.
[12] Giroux's recent analysis has extended beyond schools as he increasingly examines
radical democracy and the effects of
neoliberalism on
youth,
higher education and
society.
Giroux's work draws from a number of theoretical traditions extending from
Marx to
Paulo Freire to
Zygmunt Bauman. He is also a leading advocate of
radical democracy, vigorously opposing the anti-democratic tendencies of
neoliberalism,
militarism,
empire,
religious fundamentalism, and the ongoing attacks against the social state, the social wage, youth, the poor, and public and higher education. Giroux's most recent work focuses on
public pedagogy, a term he coined to describe the nature of the spectacle and the
new media, and the political and educational force of global culture.
Accomplishments
Henry Giroux's writing has won many awards, and is written for a range of public and scholarly sources. Giroux has written more than 35 books; published almost 300 papers; and hundreds of chapters in others' books, articles in magazines, and more. Seven of Giroux's books have been chosen as significant books of the year by the
American Educational Studies Association.
While at
Miami University Giroux was named as a Distinguished Scholar. He won the Visiting Distinguished Professor Award for 1987-1988 at the
University of Missouri - Kansas City. Between 1992 and 2004, he held the Waterbury Chair Professorship at
Penn State University. He was awarded the Visiting Asa Knowles Chair Professorship by
Northeastern University in 1995. He won a
Tokyo Metropolitan University Fellowship for Research in August 1995.
In 1998 Giroux was selected to the Laureate Chapter of
Kappa Delta Phi. He was awarded a Distinguished Visiting Lectureship in art education at the School of the
Art Institute of Chicago in 1998 and 1999. He was the winner of a
Getty Research Institute Visiting Scholar Award for May-June, 2000. He was selected as a Hooker Distinguished Visiting Professor at
McMaster University in 2001.
He was named as one of the top fifty educational thinkers of the modern period in ''Fifty Modern Thinkers on Education: From Piaget to the Present'' as part of
Routledge’s "Key Guides Publication Series" (2002). In 2001 Giroux won the James L. Kinneavy Award for the most outstanding article published in JAC in 2001, which was presented by the
Association of Teachers of Advanced Composition at the Conference on College Composition and Communication Chicago in March 2002.
Giroux was selected as the Barstow Visiting Scholar for 2003 at
Saginaw Valley State University. In 2005, he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Letters by
Memorial University of
Newfoundland.
Books by Giroux
In addition to being a co-Editor-in-chief of the ''Review of Education, Pedagogy and Cultural Studies''
[13] published by
Taylor and Francis, Giroux has published the following books:
★ ''Ideology, Culture and the Process of Schooling.'' (1981)
★ ''Theory and Resistance in Education.'' (1983)
★ ''The Hidden Curriculum and Moral Education: Deception or Discovery?.'' (with David E. Purpel)(1983)
★ ''Education Under Siege: The Conservative, Liberal, and Radical Debate Over Schooling.'' (co-authored with
Stanley Aronowitz) (1985)
★ ''Schooling and the Struggle for Public Life.'' (1988)
★ ''Teachers as Intellectuals: Toward a Critical Pedagogy of Learning.'' (1988)
★ ''Border Crossings: Cultural Workers and the Politics of Education.'' (1992)
★ ''Between Borders: Pedagogy and the Politics of Cultural Studies'' (with
Peter McLaren) (1993)
★ ''Disturbing Pleasures: Learning Popular Culture.'' (1994)
★ ''Fugitive Cultures: Race, Violence, and Youth Routledge Publishing.'' (1996)
★ ''Living dangerously: Multiculturalism and the politics of difference.'' (1996)
★ ''The Mouse that Roared: Disney and the End of Innocence.'' (1999)
★ ''Stealing Innocence: Corporate Culture's War on Children.'' (2001)
★ ''Breaking In to the Movies: Film and the Culture of Politics.'' (2002)
★ ''The Abandoned Generation: Democracy Beyond the Culture of Fear.'' (2004)
★ ''Terror of Neoliberalism.'' (2004)
★ ''Against the New Authoritarianism.'' (2005)
★ ''Beyond the Spectacle of Terrorism: Global Uncertainty and the Challenge of the New Media.'' (2006)
★ ''America on the Edge: Henry Giroux on Politics, Education, and Culture.'' (2006)
★ ''The Giroux Reader.'' (2006)
★ ''Stormy Weather: Katrina and the Politics of Disposability.'' (2006)
★ ''The University in Chains: Confronting the Military-Industrial-Academic Complex.'' (2007)
Books about Giroux
★ ''Reading & Teaching Henry Giroux.'' Doyle & Singh. (2006)
See also
★
Paulo Freire
★
Peter McLaren
★
Teaching for social justice
★
Youth empowerment
References
1. (2005) "McMaster attracts widely acclaimed U.S. scholar Henry Giroux" McMaster University. Retrieved 8/6/07.
2. (2005) ""McMaster University snags famous theory professor," ''e. Peak News.'' Simon Frasier University. Retrieved 8/6/07.
3. Dr. Henry A. Giroux - Books. Personal website. Retrieved 8/6/07.
4. (2005) "Giroux's inaugural lecture takes aim at our current 'Dark Age'". McMaster University. Retrieved 8/6/07.
5. "Dr. Henry A. Giroux Books," Personal website. Retrieved 8/6/07.
6. "The University in Chains", Paradigm Publishers. Retrieved 8/7/07.
7. Palmer, J. (2002) ''Fifty Modern Thinkers on Education: From Piaget to the Present Day (Fifty Key Thinkers) (Routledge Key Guides).'' Routledge Publishers. p. 208.
8. (n.d.) Henry Giroux Miami University.
9. (n.d.) Henry A. Giroux - Biography The Arts Council - Dublin.
10. (n.d.) Henry Giroux - Author Bio ''In These Times'' magazine.
11. Drolet, D. (2005) "The pursuit of happiness: Some American academics are moving north for the milder social climate." ''University Affairs'' magazine.
12. (n.d.) Rage & Hope: Henry Giroux
13. ''Review of Education, Pedagogy and Cultural Studies'' Taylor and Francis. Retrieved 7/21/07
External links
★
Henry Giroux's Website
★
Reading list at
The Freechild Project website
★
Biographical details
★
Henry Giroux's brief interview on YouTube