(2009-2010)
Ibrahim, A. (in progress). Being the strong poet:
Ethics, logos and the practice of visionary education. Harvard Educational
Review.
Ibrahim, A. (in progress). Will they ever speak,
with authority?: Race, post-coloniality and the symbolic violence
of language. Educational Philosophy & Theory.
Ibrahim, A. (forthcoming). “Hey, whassup homeoby?”
Becoming Black: Hip-Hop language and culture, race performativity,
and the politics of identity in high school. Toronto: University of
Toronto Press.
Ibrahim, A. (in press). The question of the question
is the foreigner: The spectre of Blackness and the economy of hospitality
in Canada. In Nelson, C. (Ed.), Ebony roots, northern soil: Perspectives
on Blackness in Canada. McGill-Queen’s Press.
Ibrahim, A. (2009 – in press). When life is
off da hook: Hip-Hop identity and identification, BESL, and the pedagogy
of pleasure. In Higgins, C. (Ed.), Negotiating the self in another
language: Identity formation in a globalized world. Berlin: Mouton
de Gruyter.
Ibrahim, A. (2009). Operating under erasure: Race/language/identity.
In Ryuko, A & Lin, A. (Eds.), Race, language and identity (pp.
176-194). London & New York: Routledge.
Ibrahim, A. (2009). Takin Hip-Hop to a whole nother
level: Métissage, affect and pedagogy in a Global Hip-Hop Nation.
In Alim, S., Ibrahim, A. and Pennycook, A. (Eds.), Global linguistic
flows: Hip-Hop cultures, youth identities, and the politics of language
(pp. 231-248). London & New York: Routledge.
Alim, S., Ibrahim, A. and Pennycook, A. (2009).
Global linguistic flows: Hip-Hop cultures, youth identities, and the
politics of language. London & New York: Routledge.
Ibrahim, A. (2009). Learning to learn: Makiguchi
as a “strong poet” of geography, courage and happiness.
Educational Studies 45(2), 221-226.
(2006-2008)
Ibrahim, A. (2008). Operating under erasure: Race/Language/Identity.
Canadian and International Education Journal 37(2), 56-76.
Ibrahim, A. (2008). The new flâneur: Subaltern
cultural studies, African youth in Canada, and the semiology of in-betweenness.
Cultural Studies 22(2), 234-253.
Salinas, J., Aguiano, R. & Ibrahim, A. (2008).
Migrant Conscious: Education, métissage and the politics of
farmworking in Latino communities. Philosophical Studies in Education,
39, 87-96.
Xie, P., Osumare, H. & Ibrahim, A. (2007). Gazing
the hood: Hip-Hop as tourism attraction. Tourism Management, 28, 452-460.
Ibrahim, A. (2007) Linking Marxism, globalization
and citizenship education: Toward a comparative and critical pedagogy
post-9/11. Educational Theory, 57(1), 89-103.
Ibrahim, A. (2006). Social justice: A language
reconsidered. Philosophical Studies in Education, 37, 1-8.
Ibrahim, A. (2006). The beauty of representation:
Or, what’s Hip-Hop got to do with “The Daily Show”?
Philosophical Studies in Education, 37, 39-43.
Ibrahim, A. (2006). Rethinking displacement, language,
and culture shock: Towards a pedagogy of cultural translation and
negotiation. In Amin, N. and Dei, G. (Eds.), The poetics of anti-racism
(pp. 33-45). Halifax: Fernwood Books.
Ibrahim, A. (2006). Becoming Black: Rap and Hip
Hop, race, gender, identity, and the politics of ESL learning. In
Matsuda, P., Cox, M., Jordan, J., and Ortmeier-Hooper, C. (Eds), Second-language
writing in the composition classroom: A critical sourcebook (pp. 131-148).
New York: St. Martin’s.
Ibrahim, A. (2006). There is no alibi for being
(Black)? Race, dialogic space, and the politics of trialectic identity.
In Teelucksingh, C. (Ed.), Claiming space: Racialization and spatiality
in Canadian cities (pp. 83-100). Waterloo, ON: Wilfrid Laurier University
Press.
(1999-2005)
Ibrahim, A. (2005). The question of the question
is the foreigner: Towards an economy of hospitality. Journal of Curriculum
Theorizing, 21(2), 149-162.
Ibrahim, A. (2004). One is not born Black: Becoming
and the phenomenon(ology) of race. Philosophical Studies in Education,
35, 89-97.
Ibrahim, A. (2004). Operating under erasure: Hip-Hop
and the pedagogy of affect(ive). Journal of Curriculum Theorizing,
20(1), 113-133.
Ibrahim, A. (2004). Performing desire: Race, identity,
identification, and the politics of Becoming Black. In Nelson, C.
and Nelson, C. (Eds.), Racism Eh? A critical inter-disciplinary anthology
on race in the Canadian context (pp. 120-135). Toronto: Captus University
Press.
Ibrahim, A. (2003). “Whassup homeboy?”
Joining the African diaspora: Black English as a symbolic site of
identification and language learning. In Makoni, S., Smitherman, G.,
Ball, A. & Spears, A. (Eds.), Black linguistics: Language, society
and politics in Africa and the Americas (pp. 169-185). London: Routledge.
Ibrahim, A. (2003). The spectre of “and”:
Multiculturalism, antiracism, and the third continent. Inquiry: Critical
Thinking Across the Discipline, 21(3), 5-16.
Ibrahim, A. (2003). May 16, 1999: The story of the
“dark man.” Inquiry: Critical Thinking Across the Discipline,
21(3), 23-26.
Ibrahim, A. (2003). Marking the unmarked: Hip-Hop,
the gaze and the African body in North America. Critical Arts: A Journal
of South-North Cultural and Media Studies, 17(1&2), 52-70.
Ibrahim, A. (2001). “Hey, whadap homeboy?”
Identification, desire & consumption: Hip-Hop, performativity,
and the politics of Becoming Black. Taboo: Journal of Culture and
Education, 5(2), 85-102.
Ibrahim, A. (2001). Race-in-the-gap: Émigrés,
identity, identification, and the politics of ESL learning. Contact,
27(2), 67-80.
Ibrahim, A. (2000). Identity or identification?
A response to some objections. TESOL Quarterly, 33(4), 741-744.
Ibrahim, A. (2000). Trans-re-framing identity: Race,
language, culture, and the politics of translation. Trans/forms: Insurgent
Voices in Education, 5(2), 120-135.
Ibrahim, A. (2000). “Hey, ain’t I Black
too?” The politics of Becoming Black. In R. Walcott (Ed.), Rude:
Contemporary Black Canadian cultural criticism (pp. 109-136). Toronto:
Insomniac Press.
Ibrahim, A. (2000). "Whassup Homeboy?"
Black/popular culture and the politics of “curriculum studies”:
Devising an anti-racism perspective. In G. J. S. Dei and A. Calliste
(Eds.), Power, knowledge and anti-racism education: A critical reader
(pp. 57-72). Halifax: Fernwood.
Ibrahim, A. (1999). Becoming Black: Rap and Hip
Hop, race, gender, identity, and the politics of ESL learning. TESOL
Quarterly, 33(3), 349-369.