|
|
Showing 1 - 25 of
97 matches in All Departments
Human civilisation stands at an unimaginable precipice. The human
past, leading up to today, has seen society develop under the
conditions of the Holocene since 10000 BC. However - we are now in
the Anthropocene, what Deleuze/Guattari term as the future
rupturing the present. This book analyses the Anthropocene given
four dimensions: 'tool-enhancement'; 'carbon trail'; 'the
phallocene'; and 'atomic-time'. A mode of education and social
change lies parallel to this mapping that tackles degrowth,
changing consciousness, a Green Utopia, and building a
critical-immanent model to realign current practices in the light
of globalisation. This is the first book to put the philosophy of
Deleuze/Guattari to work for the future, and our collective
existence as a differentiated educational practice in the
Anthropocene.
Human civilisation stands at an unimaginable precipice. The human
past, leading up to today, has seen society develop under the
conditions of the Holocene since 10000 BC. However - we are now in
the Anthropocene, what Deleuze/Guattari term as the future
rupturing the present. This book analyses the Anthropocene given
four dimensions: 'tool-enhancement'; 'carbon trail'; 'the
phallocene'; and 'atomic-time'. A mode of education and social
change lies parallel to this mapping that tackles degrowth,
changing consciousness, a Green Utopia, and building a
critical-immanent model to realign current practices in the light
of globalisation. This is the first book to put the philosophy of
Deleuze/Guattari to work for the future, and our collective
existence as a differentiated educational practice in the
Anthropocene.
Recently, educators have begun to consider what is required in
literacy curricula and best teaching practices given the demands
placed on the educator sector and on literacy in general.
""Multiliteracies and Technology Enhanced Education: Social
Practice and the Global Classroom"" features theoretical
reflections and approaches on the use of multiliteracies and
technologies in the improvement of education and social practices.
Assisting educators at different teaching levels and fostering
professional development and progress in this growing field, this
innovative publication supports practitioners concerned with
teaching at both a local and global level.
MappingMultiple Literaciesbrings together the latest theory and
research in the fields of literacy studyand European philosophy,
Multiple Literacies Theory (MLT) and the philosophicalwork of
Gilles Deleuze. It frames the process of becoming literate as a
fluidprocess involving multiple modes of presentation, and explains
these processesin terms of making maps of our social lives and ways
of doing things together.For Deleuze, language acquisition is a
social activityof which we are a part, but only one partamongst
many others..Masny and Cole draw on Deleuze's thinking to expand
the repertoires of literacyresearch and understanding. They outline
how we can understand literacy as asocial activity and map the ways
in which becoming literate may take hold andtransform communities.
The chapters in this book weave together theory, dataand practice
to open up a creative new area of literacy studies and to
provokevigorous debate about the sociology of literacy.
This volume is the first major production of the globalisation
research strand of the Centre for Educational Research at Western
Sydney University. This book makes a significant contribution to
the theory of and research in globalisation and education, and
tackles the topics of superdiversity and supercomplexity. The
book's thesis is that the effects of globalisation on education can
only be understood if the specific yet complex conditions of
globalisation in education are investigated. The book takes an
international approach to understanding globalisation and does not
restrict itself to just one methodological or theoretical plane of
investigation. Education is one of these frontline domains in which
the effects of superdiversity cannot be dismissed, minimized or
denied. The continuously increasing complexity of learning
environments is raising critical issues at every level, from
description over analysis to theoretical generalization, and this
book is a first and fruitful attempt at charting these waters. This
pioneering book will remain a key text for many years to come. Jan
Bloomaert Professor of Language, Culture and Globalization and
Director of the Babylon Center Tilburg University, the Netherlands.
This provocative collection works from two premises: that today
there is superdiversity in our globalised world and related is a
supercomplexity of theoretical and methodological approaches. The
collection proffers multifarious challenges for educational theory,
research and practice in working with, through and across these two
premises. As such, Super Dimensions in Globalisation and Education
is essential reading for all educational researchers, whatever
their interests or location. Professor Bob Lingard The University
of Queensland, Australia. This is a highly imaginative book that
stops 'flat earth' and convergence arguments dead in their tracks.
Its genius is to bring super-complexity and super-diversity into a
conversation with each other and with education, and in doing so
shed light on the numerous and unexpected ways in which global
processes are shaping education in revealing and compelling ways.
Any scholar concerned with globalisation and education will find
Super Dimensions in Globalisation and Education a' must have' on
their reading list. Professor Susan Robertson Director of the
Centre for Globalisation, Education and Social FuturesUniversity of
Bristol, UK. This is an absorbing and compelling collection. It
takes readers on a kaleidoscopic journey through various intricate
expressions of the nexus between globalisation and education. And
it offers multiple ways that such expressions can be thought and
rethought. In transcending conventional categorisations it invites
educators to do so too. Professor Jane Kenway, Australian
Professorial Fellow - Australian Research Council, Education
Faculty, Monash University, Australia.
Ever since the edifying life written by his sister in the months
after his death, canonical representations of Blaise Pascal
(1623-1662) have revered him for the scientific genius of his
youth, the religious conversions of his mid-life, and the great
books and greater saintliness of his last years. All this
monumentalizes the hero, but it also reduces the man to a mind and
spirit and it divides his life and work into unrelated halves. The
preeminent specialist, Jean Mesnard, still picks up the subject
where Gilberte Pascal left it in 1662. No historian in our language
has even attempted to put the halves together again. In Pascal: The
Man and His Two Loves, John R. Cole reintegrates a life that began
with familial attachments and achieved youthful marvels of
invention and experiment with an Arithmetic Machine and Vacuum
Experiments; Cole argues that love for his father spun the wheels
and filled the void. Pascal then converted, having suffered
particularly painful separations and losses; Cole's central
chapters adapt Freudian methods to relate his newly ardent love of
God to his prior love of parents. Finally, the convert wrote
contrasting classics, the Provincial Letters and the Penses, before
years of sanctified suffering terminated his work; Cole suggests
that disciplined study of his affective life makes possible new
readings of these great books.
Irreconcilable Differences is an attempt to peer into the future in
the light of recent and ongoing events. Author David Cole proposes
that Americans may be living through the beginning of the
devolution of the United States of America - a development that may
unfold after our lifetimes, although it could happen sooner. Cole
surveys examples of devolutionary political developments around the
world in recent decades. He offers a running commentary on recent
polemics, as commentators in the press consider the evidence of
American political decline and decay. He speculates as to exactly
what form a devolved United States might take. The conjecture is
that a point could be reached at which Americans conclude that an
amicable breakup is to be preferred on the whole to an attempt to
continue to live under the same tent. Is contemporary America an
example of the Aristotelian phenomenon of "coming into being and
passing away"?
This unique book comprehensively covers the evolving field of
transversality, globalization and education, and presents creative,
research-based thought experiments that seek to unravel the forces
of globalization impacting education. Pursuing various approaches
to and uses of transversality, with a focus on the ideas of Felix
Guattari, it is the only book of its kind. Specifically, it
examines the influence of Guattari at the forefront of educational
research that addresses, enhances and sets free activist
micro-perspectives, which can counter macro-global movements, such
as capitalism and climate change. This book is a global education
research text that includes perspectives from four continents,
providing a balanced and significant work on globalization in
education.
When Edgar A. Love, Oscar J. Cooper, Frank Coleman, and Ernest
Everett Just founded the historically Black fraternity Omega Psi
Phi on November 7, 1911, at Howard University, they could not have
known how great of an impact their organization would have on
American life. Over the 110 years that followed, its members led
colleges and universities; served in prominent military roles; made
innumerable contributions to education, civic society, science, and
medicine; and at least one campaigned for the US presidency. This
book offers a comprehensive, authoritative history of the
fraternity, emphasizing its vital role through multiple eras of the
Black freedom struggle. The authors address both the individual
work of its membership, which has included such figures as Carter
G. Woodson, Bayard Rustin, Roy Wilkins, James L. Farmer Jr.,
Benjamin Elijah Mays, James Clyburn, Jesse Jackson, and Benjamin
Crump, and the collective efforts of the fraternity's leadership to
encourage its general membership to contribute to the struggle in
concrete ways over the years. The result is a book that uniquely
connects the 1910s with the present, showing the ongoing power of a
Black fraternal organization to channel its members toward social
reform.
Contemporary French philosophy perhaps reached a high point during
the 1970s with the likes of Gilles Deleuze, Michel Foucault and
Jacques Derrida. Since that time, thinkers such as Francois
Laruelle, Bernard Stiegler, Quentin Meillassoux and Catherine
Malabou have continued on in this strong tradition, while deepening
and rethinking many of the parameters that have made contemporary
French philosophy so powerful and useful for understanding the
contemporary condition. For example, new French thought has
reengaged with the relationships between thought, science and
universal commercial interests, and has investigated purposefully
the possibilities of post-capitalist theorising. This book, while
not exhaustive, takes the most pertinent aspects of new French
thought, and applies them to the philosophy of education. In
contemporary philosophies of education, the repetitions of
evidence-based and neoliberal theories abound. This book serves as
an antidote to the levelling off, and exhaustion in thought, that a
capitalist takeover implies, while keeping sight of the crucial
relationships between science, the arts and metaphysical
speculation. Furthermore, this book represents a thoroughgoing
thinking through of philosophy of education's relationships with
neuroscience, new scientific paradigms, feminist materialisms,
anti-correlationism, technology and the socius, and as such
constitutes a new philosophy of education. This book was originally
published as a special issue of Educational Philosophy and Theory.
Trans Identities in the French Media: Representation, Visibility,
Recognition explores the representation of trans identities in
contemporary French society, with essays in fields as wide-ranging
as translation studies, women's and gender studies, film studies,
and comics studies. This book analyzes the multi-layered meaning of
"representation" to reflect on the questions of trans visibility
and recognition in a French context. The texts selected provide
readers with in-depth and innovative analyses that discuss the
representation of trans identities in the French media, its main
challenges, as well as the pitfalls and innovations that shape
these representations today.
Contemporary French philosophy perhaps reached a high point during
the 1970s with the likes of Gilles Deleuze, Michel Foucault and
Jacques Derrida. Since that time, thinkers such as Francois
Laruelle, Bernard Stiegler, Quentin Meillassoux and Catherine
Malabou have continued on in this strong tradition, while deepening
and rethinking many of the parameters that have made contemporary
French philosophy so powerful and useful for understanding the
contemporary condition. For example, new French thought has
reengaged with the relationships between thought, science and
universal commercial interests, and has investigated purposefully
the possibilities of post-capitalist theorising. This book, while
not exhaustive, takes the most pertinent aspects of new French
thought, and applies them to the philosophy of education. In
contemporary philosophies of education, the repetitions of
evidence-based and neoliberal theories abound. This book serves as
an antidote to the levelling off, and exhaustion in thought, that a
capitalist takeover implies, while keeping sight of the crucial
relationships between science, the arts and metaphysical
speculation. Furthermore, this book represents a thoroughgoing
thinking through of philosophy of education's relationships with
neuroscience, new scientific paradigms, feminist materialisms,
anti-correlationism, technology and the socius, and as such
constitutes a new philosophy of education. This book was originally
published as a special issue of Educational Philosophy and Theory.
This dead letter presents a rendition and exploration of the
immanent materialism of Deleuze & Guattari as theorised in 1000
Plateaus and as a means to analysing everyday life. The evidence
that will be presented to back up and expand upon such an analysis
consists of art, film and objects from life that relate to and
suggest the complex ways in which we are affected by traffic jams.
A picture of a reciprocating substrata of everyday life is
presented that includes and builds upon the unconscious, and shows
how the abstract turbulence of everyday life forms eddies and flows
that may be followed and understood. The immanent materialism of
Deleuze & Guattari is a philosophical construction that leads
to the formation of 'plateaus' as they were executed in A Thousand
Plateaus. The plateau of this dead letter is 21 October 2011: the
Petro-Citizen]. The writing contained here populates this plateau
with traffic jams, car crashes, global environmental concerns and
the psychological and sociological contingencies that accompany the
petro-citizen. Connections between the strata that make up the
plateau of the petro-citizen will deliberately be left as
open-ended and speculative to show how the petro-citizen functions
as a flagrant construct in everyday life, and such a postulation
and designation includes the desire for petrol and explains the
resulting panpsychic petro-political landscape. The
double-articulation of the plateau will be explored in this letter
through the ways in which the petro-citizen and petro-politics
create reciprocating realms of motivation and drive that tend
towards contemporary double-articulation, paradox and contradiction
with respect to the usages of oil. In this letter, the
double-articulation results in a multiple chequered flag or
illusionary global end game that designates the current human
relationships with oil.
The realities of new technological and social conditions since
the 1990s demand a new approach to literacy teaching. Looking
onward from the original statement of aims of the multiliteracies
movement in 1996, this volume brings together top-quality
scholarship and research that has embraced the notion and features
new contributions by many of the originators of this approach to
literacy.
Drawing on large research projects and empirical evidence, the
authors explore practical and educational issues that relate to
multiliteracies, such as assessment, pedagogy and curriculum. The
viewpoint taken is that multiliteracies is a complementary
socio-cultural approach to the new literacies that includes
pedagogy and learning. The differences are addressed from a
multiliteracies perspective - one that does not discount or
undermine the new literacies, but shows new ways in which they are
complementary.
Computers and the internet are transforming the way we work and
communicate and the very notion of literacy itself. This volume
offers frontline information and a vital update for those wishing
to understand the evolution of multiliteracies and the current
state of literacy theory in relation to it.
The realities of new technological and social conditions since
the 1990s demand a new approach to literacy teaching. Looking
onward from the original statement of aims of the multiliteracies
movement in 1996, this volume brings together top-quality
scholarship and research that has embraced the notion and features
new contributions by many of the originators of this approach to
literacy.
Drawing on large research projects and empirical evidence, the
authors explore practical and educational issues that relate to
multiliteracies, such as assessment, pedagogy and curriculum. The
viewpoint taken is that multiliteracies is a complementary
socio-cultural approach to the new literacies that includes
pedagogy and learning. The differences are addressed from a
multiliteracies perspective one that does not discount or undermine
the new literacies, but shows new ways in which they are
complementary.
Computers and the internet are transforming the way we work and
communicate and the very notion of literacy itself. This volume
offers frontline information and a vital update for those wishing
to understand the evolution of multiliteracies and the current
state of literacy theory in relation to it.
The Terran military has defeated the invading fleet, but the war is
far from over. As a covert agent embeds himself on Earth, advanced
Centauri technology enables him to pry into the military's most
secure files, accessing secrets that could lead to millions of
deaths.Lieutenant Commander Thomas Kane, Lieutenant Katja Emmes,
and Sublieutenant Jack Mallory again find themselves at the
forefront of the planet's defenses. Yet terrorism isn't the only
threat they face. Given what they've experienced, their greatest
challenge may be defeating the memories of war.
Teaching Health Humanities expands our understanding of the
burgeoning field of health humanities and of what it aspires to be.
The volume's contributors describe their different degree programs,
the politics and perspectives that inform their teaching, and
methods for incorporating newer digital and multimodal technologies
into teaching practices. Each chapter lays out theories that guide
contributors' pedagogy, describes its application to syllabus
design, and includes, at the finer level, examples of lesson plans,
class exercises, and/or textual analyses. Contributions also focus
on pedagogies that integrate critical race, feminist, queer,
disability, class, and age studies in courses, with most essays
exemplifying intersectional approaches to these axes of difference
and oppression. The culminating section includes chapters on
teaching with digital technology, as well as descriptions of
courses that bridge bioethics and music, medical humanities and
podcasts, health humanities filmmaking, and visual arts in
end-of-life care. By collecting scholars from a wide array of
disciplinary specialties, professional ranks, and institutional
affiliations, the volume offers a snapshot of the diverse ways
medical/health humanities is practiced today and maps the diverse
institutional locations where it is called upon to do work. It
provides educators across diverse terrains myriad insights that
will energize their teaching.
|
|