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This Fist Called My Heart: The Peter McLaren Reader, Volume I is
"at the same time an homage, a gathering, an intellectual
activist's...toolkit, a teacher's bullshit detector, a parent's
demand list and an academic's orienting topography. This collection
of essays...represents some of the most central and important work
of Peter McLaren; work he has done on behalf of people's liberation
and humanization over more than three decades. [It provides]
readers with an opportunity to develop a deep understanding of
McLaren's intellectual history and academic development, and the
thinking processes that lead to his current framework and
intellectual/philosophical/political situatedness in humanist
Marxism. Through these gathered and sequentially presented essays,
readers will be able to `see' McLaren in the process of his theory
construction, over time, without missing his essence of struggling
for a just society that promotes the full humanity and liberation
of all people. [Here,] we have curated some of the most exemplary
essays along the trajectory of Peter McLaren's long and impactful
career. These pieces track and document Peter's intellectual grow
as one of North America's most important intellectuals and
advocates for critical pedagogy; his theorizing of the discursive
and the everyday through post-modernist and post-structural lenses;
his contributions to the literature and practice of critical
multiculturalism; his stirring work on capitalist empire, and
valiant struggles to resist it; through to his foundational, long
held connection and cutting edge contribution to the field of
humanist Marxism."
Whereas This Fist Called My Heart, the first Peter McLaren reader
(2016), offers a window into the development and reorientation of
McLaren's work over time, Tracks to Infinity emphasizes the
significance of orientation in his contemporary work. McLaren's
earlier work was oriented toward the idea of a contradictory
postmodern subjectivity located outside the increasingly
fragmented, indeterminate late capitalist society. If the concept
of the critical subject or change agent is perceived to be
simultaneously located both inside and outside of the world that
exists, however mundane, it begins to appear as a utopian or
idealist construction. While discourse is indeed important,
locating the revolutionary potential exclusively within the
abstract realm of language or the sign can lead to a disconnected
relationship with the concreteness of everyday struggle. As the fog
of the disembodied, postmodern subject began to lift, McLaren
reoriented his engagement with and gaze toward the concrete
value-creating laborer as the active agent of revolutionary
educations' process of becoming-collectively becoming something
other than abstract labor. This volume is filled with deep
engagements with the concreteness of lived experience juxtaposed
next to the bourgeois propaganda of the capitalist class political
establishment as manifested in the Trump era.
This Fist Called My Heart: The Peter McLaren Reader, Volume I is
"at the same time an homage, a gathering, an intellectual
activist's...toolkit, a teacher's bullshit detector, a parent's
demand list and an academic's orienting topography. This collection
of essays...represents some of the most central and important work
of Peter McLaren; work he has done on behalf of people's liberation
and humanization over more than three decades. [It provides]
readers with an opportunity to develop a deep understanding of
McLaren's intellectual history and academic development, and the
thinking processes that lead to his current framework and
intellectual/philosophical/political situatedness in humanist
Marxism. Through these gathered and sequentially presented essays,
readers will be able to `see' McLaren in the process of his theory
construction, over time, without missing his essence of struggling
for a just society that promotes the full humanity and liberation
of all people. [Here,] we have curated some of the most exemplary
essays along the trajectory of Peter McLaren's long and impactful
career. These pieces track and document Peter's intellectual grow
as one of North America's most important intellectuals and
advocates for critical pedagogy; his theorizing of the discursive
and the everyday through post-modernist and post-structural lenses;
his contributions to the literature and practice of critical
multiculturalism; his stirring work on capitalist empire, and
valiant struggles to resist it; through to his foundational, long
held connection and cutting edge contribution to the field of
humanist Marxism."
Whereas This Fist Called My Heart, the first Peter McLaren reader
(2016), offers a window into the development and reorientation of
McLaren's work over time, Tracks to Infinity emphasizes the
significance of orientation in his contemporary work. McLaren's
earlier work was oriented toward the idea of a contradictory
postmodern subjectivity located outside the increasingly
fragmented, indeterminate late capitalist society. If the concept
of the critical subject or change agent is perceived to be
simultaneously located both inside and outside of the world that
exists, however mundane, it begins to appear as a utopian or
idealist construction. While discourse is indeed important,
locating the revolutionary potential exclusively within the
abstract realm of language or the sign can lead to a disconnected
relationship with the concreteness of everyday struggle. As the fog
of the disembodied, postmodern subject began to lift, McLaren
reoriented his engagement with and gaze toward the concrete
value-creating laborer as the active agent of revolutionary
educations' process of becoming-collectively becoming something
other than abstract labor. This volume is filled with deep
engagements with the concreteness of lived experience juxtaposed
next to the bourgeois propaganda of the capitalist class political
establishment as manifested in the Trump era.
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