Fostering the Hospitable Imagination through Cosmopolitan Pedagogies: Reenvisioning Literature Education in Singapore
Abstract
While English literature once occupied a central position in national curricula, enrollment in the subject has undergone a continuing decline in English-speaking countries such as the United States and United Kingdom. Its marginal position may also be observed in formerly colonized countries such as Singapore, where the subject was introduced, appropriated, and reconstructed. My aim,in this paper, is to propose a reenvisioning of literature education premised on the principles of ethical cosmopolitanism. In the first part of the paper, I describe ethical cosmopolitanism by distinguishing it from strategic cosmopolitanism, which has more recently emerged in response to the pressures of economic globalization, leading to the economization of education. In the second part of the paper, I show how the principles of strategic cosmopolitanism have directed the national literature curriculum in Singapore through my analysis of the national syllabus and high-stakes examination papers from 1990 to the present. This leads to the third part of the paper, in which I use a case study of four literature teachers in Singapore secondary schools to characterize the ethical cosmopolitan pedagogies they employ to circumvent nation-centric, economic pressures of strategic cosmopolitanism operating at the national level. More importantly, I discuss how such pedagogies have the potential to foster a hospitable imagination, which constitutes the strongest defense one can give to literature education in the context of an increasingly culturally complex,connected, and contested global sphere.
- Journal
- Research in the Teaching of English
- Published
- 2016-05-01
- DOI
- 10.58680/rte201628598
- Open Access
- Closed
- Topics
Citation Context
Cited by in this index (0)
No articles in this index cite this work.
Cites in this index (0)
No references match articles in this index.
Related Articles
-
Computers and Composition Mar 2026Chinese EFL learners’ engagement with ChatGPT feedback on academic writing: A case study in Malaysia ↗Zhang Kailin; Murad Abdu Saeed
-
College Composition and Communication Sep 2025Using the AI Life Cycle to Unblackbox AI Tools: Teaching Résumé 2.0 with Résumé Analytics and Computational Job-Résumé Matching ↗Huiling Ding
-
College Composition and Communication Sep 2025AI Writing Is Always Embodied: Building a Critical Awareness of the Invisible Labor of Humans-in-the-Loop in AI Products ↗Gabriel Lorenzo Aguilar
-
Journal of Business and Technical Communication Jan 2025Erick Piller
-
Journal of Technical Writing and Communication Oct 2024Role Play: Conversational Roles as a Framework for Reflexive Practice in AI-Assisted Qualitative Research ↗Luke Thominet; Jacqueline Amorim; Kristine Acosta; Vanessa K. Sohan