DOMINANCE CONCEALED THROUGH DIVERSITY - IMPLICATIONS OF INADEQUATE PERSPECTIVES ON CULTURAL-PLURALISM

Authors
Citation
D. Boyd, DOMINANCE CONCEALED THROUGH DIVERSITY - IMPLICATIONS OF INADEQUATE PERSPECTIVES ON CULTURAL-PLURALISM, Harvard educational review, 66(3), 1996, pp. 609-630
Citations number
33
Categorie Soggetti
Education & Educational Research
Journal title
ISSN journal
00178055
Volume
66
Issue
3
Year of publication
1996
Pages
609 - 630
Database
ISI
SICI code
0017-8055(1996)66:3<609:DCTD-I>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
In this article, Dwight Boyd focuses on a dilemma that is at the heart of sincere commitments to cultural pluralism. When the moral aspects of cultural diversity are fully appreciated, the ''dilemma of diversit y'' is revealed as the tension point resulting from the acceptance of the fact of ''reasonable moral pluralism'' conjoined with the perceive d need to morally ground prescriptive intentions to promote cultural d iversity within a democratic society. After discussing this dilemma, B oyd analyzes three perspectives commonly found in response. He argues that each of these perspectives is inadequate by revealing how it fail s to come to grips with one or the other side of the dilemma, despite its surface appeal. He then shows how, in each of these perspectives, this failure functions to conceal and protect dominant points of view within the diversity. He concludes by sketching out a positive directi on for successfully addressing the dilemma of diversity hinted at in t he successes and failures of each of the three perspectives.