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Exposing a Culture of Neglect

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The book reveals the unexpected reach of historical research, focusing on a forgotten figure who significantly contributed to education. It challenges st&ard histories, suggesting they need rec...
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  • 01 February 2005
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In this book Professor Davis illustrates the often unexpected reach of historical research intended originally to fill a knowledge gap. He found a forgotten figure from the past who as a scholar and teacher had contributed significantly to education. Manuel’s story warranted attention, but in reconstructing it Professor Davis discovered leads to a more complex account in which the key actor, his ideas, and certain precise, albeit dynamic, social conditions intersected and influenced each other. In the end the book not only fills a gap, making the history of education in Texas and the United States more complete, it also underscores the thrust of other recent contributions to Latin American studies in casting doubt on the reliability of previously accepted standard histories. These accounts now seem dated and suspiciously wrong-headed. New research like that of Professor Davis pointedly suggests the old histories need to be reconceptualized, reorganized, and rewritten. Methodologically and substantively, his book advances work on this agenda. Specifically, it provokes fresh thinking about the now indisputably linked histories of education research, Mexican Americans, and racism in the United States.

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Price: $100.00
Pages: 168
Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
Imprint: Information Age Publishing
Series: Research in Curriculum and Instruction
Publication Date: 01 February 2005
ISBN: 9781593113155
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: EDUCATION / General, Education / Educational sciences / Pedagogy
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Foreword: No Ashes, No Phoenix; Donald Warren.
Acknowledgments.
Prologue: The Importance of a Life.
Section I. Temperance Well Leaned (1887–1925): The Childhood and Early Career of an Educator.
Chapter 1. Indiana Roots (1887–1913).
Chapter 2. Indiana to Texas Interlude (1913–1925).
Section II. Passion Revealed (1925–1940): "Segregation Is a Dangerous Policy".
Chapter 3. Texas Beginnings (1935–1940).
Chapter 4. Picture of Neglect and Antagonism.
Chapter 5. Psychologist as Prophet (1930–1940).
Section III. Passion Endures (1940–1976): The Improvement of Human Relations.
Chapter 6. Model Inter-American (1940–1958).
Chapter 7. Elder Statesman (1958–1976).
Epilogue: Manuel's Legacies.
Appendix: Herschel T. Manuel—Bibliography.