Cathryn van Kessel is an associate professor of curriculum studies at Texas Christian University and a former secondary social studies and Latin teacher from Canada. Kimberly Edmondson is a doctoral student in the Faculty of Education at the University of Alberta and a high school social studies teacher in Alberta, Canada.
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Contents Foreword: The Problem of Villainification ?Michalinos Zembylas ?vii Acknowledgments ?xi Introduction ?1 Cathryn van Kessel and Kimberly Edmondson PART I: VILLAINIFICATION AND SOCIAL STUDIES CURRICULUM 1. ?Heroification, Villainification, and Political Polarization: Implications for Thinking Politically About U.S. Politics ?13 WayneJournell 2. ?"Incapable, Uninterested, and Ineffective"?: Locating Villainification Narratives in Financial Education ?29 ErinC. Adams 3. ?Will the Real Villain Please Stand Up?: Holocaust Education and Its Hidden Transgressors ?45 RebeccaC. Christ, Brandon Haas, and Oren Baruch Stier 4. ?Removing the Binaries in History Curricula and Teacher Education: Difficult-ishas an Antidote to Villainification and Its Partner, "Difficult Histories" ?63 Brittany Jones PART II: VILLAINIFICATION LESSONS FROM POPULAR CULTURE 5. ?Subverting the Villain Trope in Apocalyptic Fiction: Survivance in MoonoftheCrustedSnow ?79 Kimberly Edmondson and Keri Helgren 6. ?"Hang On, So That Thing's a Loki Too?": Mimetic Materialities, Variants, and Villainy ?95 BrettonA. Varga and ErinC. Adams 7. ?Wanda the Villain?: How WandaVisionCan Aid Discussions About Enslavement and Anti-Black Racism ?111 Danelle Adeniji, Melissa McQueen, and Cathryn van Kessel PART III: SOCIOCULTURAL IMPLICATIONS OF VILLAINIFICATION NARRATIVES 8. ?Can Technology Be Evil?: Heroes, Villains, and the Banality of Technology ?127 RyanM. Smits and DanielG. Krutka 9. ?Identifying the Villain: Antivillainification, Social Studies, and LGBTQ Individuals ?145 Heather P. Abrahamson 10. ?Anti-Complicity Education: Combating Supervillains and Lesser Villains in Contemporary Rape Culture ?161 AmandaM.E. Thomson 11. ?Placial Villains: Naming, Memorial Geographies of Invasion, and the Work of Social Studies ?181 Bryan Smith 12. ?Horses, Heretics, and Madame Deficit: The Historical Villainification of the Female Body ?197 Andrew Thomson Concluding Thoughts ?213 Cathryn van Kessel and Kimberly Edmondson About the Editors and Contributors ?215 Index ?219