Abstract
There is no education without some form of media. The field of educational media is a growing area of interest in education, as educational policy papers on the ‘digital agenda’, the rapid expansion of media sections in national and international educational research associations, and the range of academic books on media in education show. Educational media are crucial to producing knowledge and shaping educational practices. Conflicts over the contents of textbooks and curricula, widely discussed in the daily news, illustrate how many different stakeholders are invested in sharing their particular understandings of our (shared) past, the current society and potential imagined futures with the younger generation. Policymakers, politicians and activists regard educational media as important tools which not only foster young people’s media skills and world knowledge, but which also shape which ways of living are considered desirable or even legible. Textbooks and other educational media are deeply embedded in the socio-political contexts in which they are developed and used. Given this context, alongside the emerging interest in digital technology in education, the Palgrave Studies in Educational Media series takes stock of current research on educational media by focusing on three issues: First, today’s vibrant and dynamic research and scholarship on technology stems from a broad range of disciplines, including sociology,..