Title IX Reforms and Campus Protests Prove Government Will Not Protect You
Pro-Hamas Activists Tie Themselves to Flag Pole After Raising Palestinian Flag
Hims CEO Looking to Hire Protesters Who Know Moral Courage Beats a College...
Biden Continues to Earn the Respect of Other Countries by Calling Japan 'Xenophobic'
MSNBC's Joe Scarborough Tells Viewers If They're Too Stupid They Can Change the...
A Year After Biden Said We 'Ended Cancer' Patients Continue Dying From Shortages...
Pfizer CEO Proudly Boasts of Saving the World from COVID
The Time Has Come to Get Serious About Punishing and Removing Campus Tyrants
A Heartbeat Away: Supercut of Kamala Harris' Word Salad Is MAJOR Cringe
Columbia Law Students Urge School to Cancel Exams, as Violence has Left Them...
Biden Bullied Into Breaking Silence, Reality for Spoiled Students!
Call a WHAAMBULANCE: Univ of South Florida Senior Whines After Suspension for Planning...
Based: John Fetterman Says There Are Two Types of Protesters - Pro-Hamas and...
Reporter Asks KJP the PERFECT Follow-Up After She Again Claims 'the President Was...
Finally, the Truth! UCLA Protest Spokesperson Shows What Protests Are REALLY About

Loudoun County 10th graders looking at literature through the lenses of critical race theory and Marxism

Listen: This editor majored in English in college (before English became the dumping ground for gay studies and then gender studies) and studied all forms of literary criticism, or at least the ones that were fashionable at the time: feminist criticism, queer theory, Marxist criticism, etc. But, tedious as it was, this was a college student studying literature.

Advertisement

Tenth-grade English students in Loudon County, Virginia are also learning to analyze literature through certain lenses, such as critical race theory, queer theory, ecocriticism, and Marxist criticism. We’ve been assured by many people that critical race theory is taught only in law school, but for these students, critical race theory means looking through the lens of “race and racism across dominant cultural modes of expression.”

“What does the work say about oppression? How do the characters overcome oppression?”

“What does the work imply about the possibilities of women joining together to resist patriarchy?” Hey, we thought we weren’t supposed to say “women” anymore; rather, “people who menstruate.” How woke is this district?

Advertisement

Advertisement

Can confirm; e.g., queer theory posits that you can find queer subtext in any work (say, “Huckleberry Finn”) regardless of the author’s intention to put it there.

Advertisement


Related:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement