We are what we say and do. The way we speak and are spoken to help
shape us into the people we become. Through words and other actions, we
build ourselves in a world that is building us. That world addresses us to
produce the different identities we carry forward in life: men are
addressed differently than are women, people of color differently than
whites, elite students differently than those from working families. Yet,
though language is fateful in teaching us what kind of people to become and
what kind of society to make, discourse is not destiny. We can redefine
ourselves and remake society, if we choose, through alternative rhetoric
and dissident projects. This is where critical literacy begins, for
questioning power relations, discourses, and identities in a world not yet
finished, just, or humane.
Critical literacy thus challenges the status quo in an effort to
discover alternative paths for self and social development. This kind of
literacy--words rethinking worlds, self dissenting in society--connects the
political and the personal, the public and the private, the global and the
local, the economic and the pedagogical, for rethinking our lives and for
promoting justice in place of inequity. Critical literacy, then, is an
attitude towards history, as Kenneth Burke (1984) might have said, or a
dream of a new society against the power now in power, as Paulo Freire
proposed (Shor and Freire, 1987), or an insurrection of subjugated
knowledges, in the ideas of Michel Foucault (1980), or a counter-hegemonic
structure of feeling, as Raymond Williams (1977) theorized, or a
multicultural resistance invented on the borders of crossing identities, as
Gloria Anzaldua (1990) imagined, or language used against fitting
unexceptionably into the status quo, as Adrienne Rich (1979) declared.