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This book explores interdisciplinary approaches to animal-focused
curriculum and pedagogy in environmental education, with an
emphasis on integrating methods from the arts, humanities, and
natural and social sciences. Each chapter, whether addressing
curriculum, pedagogy, or both, engages with the extant literature
in environmental education and other relevant fields to consider
how interdisciplinary curricular and pedagogical practices shed new
light on our understandings of and ethical/moral obligations to
animals. Embracing theories like intersectionality, posthumanism,
Indigenous cosmologies, and significant life experiences, and
considering topics such as equine training, meat consumption and
production, urban human-animal relationships, and zoos and
aquariums, the chapters collectively contribute to the field by
foregrounding the lives of animals. The volume purposefully steps
forward from the historical marginalization of animals in
educational research and practice.
Animal Edutainment in a Neoliberal Era is a rich and beautifully
written multispecies ethnographic monograph that explores pedagogy
and practice at a Southern California aquarium housing and
displaying over 10,000 animals. Drawing on extensive interviews
with aquarium staff and visitors, as well as fieldwork interacting
with and observing human-animal interactions, the book demonstrates
the complex ways in which aquarium animals are politically deployed
in teaching and learning processes. Weaving together insights from
anthropology, critical geography, environmental education, and
political ecology, Teresa Lloro crafts a three-pronged "political
ecology of education lens," illuminating how neoliberal ideologies
interact at various scales (local, regional, national, and global)
to deeply shape aquarium decision-making and practice.
Acknowledging that neoliberalism enrolls humans and other animals
in teaching and learning in new and often poorly understood ways,
this study challenges the anthropocentrism of contemporary informal
educational approaches, suggesting that imaginative ways forward
will require a paradigm shift in regarding the role of animals in
education.
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