Affect Theory and Comparative Education Discourse: Essays on Fear and Loathing in Response to Global Educational Policy and Practice: New Directions in Comparative and International Education
Autor Irving Epsteinen Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 ian 2021
Irving Epstein argues that conventional educational institutions and the policies that support them tend to ignore such anxiety by affirming a belief in educational modernism to the exclusion of other possibilities. What is missing in most of these analyses is an appreciation for the role of affect in determining how our encounters with these practices become significant and how our efforts to find meaning in those policies and practices lead to their acceptance or rejection.
This book is the first application of affect theory to comparative education themes and shows how it can help to form a more robust discussion of the policy-making process and the popular reactions to it. After discussing the key concepts associated with affect theory, he presents a total of six case studies. Three of the cases depict relationships between educational, cultural, and social organizations whose purposes conflict with one another but whose presence is indicative of a loss of faith in the efficacy of public schooling. Three of the cases are illustrative of an even greater systematic rejection of educational institutional aim and purpose.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350212206
ISBN-10: 1350212202
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.33 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria New Directions in Comparative and International Education
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350212202
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.33 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria New Directions in Comparative and International Education
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Cuprins
Series Editor Preface
1. Introduction: Comparative Education and the Case for Affect Theory
Part I: Fear
2. Addressing Mass Atrocity in Chile: Acts of Memorialization and Education: Learning and Unlearning as a Function of Social Memory
3. The Aesthetic Turn: Engagement and Meaning Making Through the Arts
4. Controlling the Body: Education, Sport, Politics, and the Sport for Development Movement
Part II: Loathing
5. Addressing Global School Violence
6. Global Student Protest: Confronting the Status Quo
7. Data Analytics and World University Rankings Systems: Destroying the University and the Professoriate
8. Conclusion
References
Index
1. Introduction: Comparative Education and the Case for Affect Theory
Part I: Fear
2. Addressing Mass Atrocity in Chile: Acts of Memorialization and Education: Learning and Unlearning as a Function of Social Memory
3. The Aesthetic Turn: Engagement and Meaning Making Through the Arts
4. Controlling the Body: Education, Sport, Politics, and the Sport for Development Movement
Part II: Loathing
5. Addressing Global School Violence
6. Global Student Protest: Confronting the Status Quo
7. Data Analytics and World University Rankings Systems: Destroying the University and the Professoriate
8. Conclusion
References
Index
Recenzii
An exceptionally intelligent and readable analysis that questions the theoretical orientations dominant in comparative education research. The book proposes the use of affect theory to address how school practices fail to respect identity for children, families and communities. Through illuminating case studies, Epstein points toward a solution when he shows, for example, how extracurricular music programs build a connection between aesthetics and social justice. Other examples focus on questioning the universal claim that schools are safe spaces for children and youth by reviewing cases of school violence and youth protest in Chile, Spain, United States and Hong Kong. Affect Theory and Comparative Education Discourse makes a timely and important contribution to rethinking the dominant theoretical and methodological perspectives within the field of comparative and international education.
A much-needed, beautifully written introduction to affect theory and its potential to in/trans/reform comparative education. Epstein's generous text provides comparative educators with a wide-ranging introduction to affect theory. He deftly shows how and why this body of approaches can (and, perhaps, must) complement current critical analyses of the global state of public education. Drawing together a remarkable range of theorists-from Baudrillard, Connell, Foucault, and Ranciere, to Bourdieu, Butler, Goffman, and Massumi-Epstein's rhizomatic chapters thread together sites as diverse as Chilean cemeteries, Kenyan soccer fields, global arts NGOs, Spanish youth protests, South African bullying programs, and US universities under the world rankings regimes. In so doing, he provides a lyrical, sweeping, and powerful account of how analytic concepts like fear, loathing, memorializing, and sensibility may generate new insights about the contingencies and potentialities-as opposed to the causes and consequences-of education policy and practice, here, there, and everywhere.
A much-needed, beautifully written introduction to affect theory and its potential to in/trans/reform comparative education. Epstein's generous text provides comparative educators with a wide-ranging introduction to affect theory. He deftly shows how and why this body of approaches can (and, perhaps, must) complement current critical analyses of the global state of public education. Drawing together a remarkable range of theorists-from Baudrillard, Connell, Foucault, and Ranciere, to Bourdieu, Butler, Goffman, and Massumi-Epstein's rhizomatic chapters thread together sites as diverse as Chilean cemeteries, Kenyan soccer fields, global arts NGOs, Spanish youth protests, South African bullying programs, and US universities under the world rankings regimes. In so doing, he provides a lyrical, sweeping, and powerful account of how analytic concepts like fear, loathing, memorializing, and sensibility may generate new insights about the contingencies and potentialities-as opposed to the causes and consequences-of education policy and practice, here, there, and everywhere.