"If it is true that race is rarely a topic of deep discussion among the majority of preservice students and education professionals, then Sleeter's honest personal narrative should help stimulate the dialogue …This volume takes the discussion away from sterile academic discourse and into the not-always-pretty world of real social action and change." —Anthropology and Education Quarterly "This book interweaves a strong theoretical framework with accounts of one's journey to understanding race, gender, and class and their influence upon identity, personal experiences, and reflections on one's own teaching as well as others. The book situates contemporary debates about multiculturalism in the U.S. within a larger international context of English-speaking countries, confronting difference. The author links theory to practice and discusses successes as well as frustrations in teaching multiculturalism as a social movement. She also critiques conservative and liberal approaches and problematizes radical critics in their dismissiveness. I found this book groundbreaking, thought provoking, and insightful regarding the personal, the political, and the pedagogical engagement in multicultural education." — Sandra Jackson, DePaul University"My understanding and appreciation of multicultural education as a broad, emancipative orientation toward schooling has been substantially expanded. Christine Sleeter unflinchingly addresses some of the most important issues in our society and in our schools." — Jim Scheurich, University of Texas–Austin"Multicultural Education as Social Activism is a vivid and rigorous inquiry and analysis of and about multicultural education. As author, Christine Sleeter also holds herself accountable for her own location derived from her racial, gender, and class positioning. From this point, her critique of conservative critics, education practitioners, and others who would employ (or dismiss) multicultural education possesses significant validity, i.e., she does not remove herself from the benefits of racism and class status as do so many (virtually all) of the critics of multicultural education." — Carl Allsup, University of Wisconsin-Platteville