Chapter 1. ENTRIES INTO AFFECTIVE CARTOGRAPHIES: ARTISTIC CARTOGRAPHY AND ABR-
PART I. FRAMING, DISPLACEMENTS, AND INQUIRY
Chapter 2. Overflowing the university: the need for another kind of academy (Amparo Alonso- University of Valencia, Spain)
Chapter 3. Touching the Moving Edge. The Research on Arts Education as an Onto-Episte-Methodological and Ethical Displacement (Natalia Calderón – Universidad Veracruzana, Mexico)
Chapter 4. Nomadic Displacements in learning (Juana M. Sancho- University of Barcelona)
PART II. CARTOGRAPHICAL MOVEMENTS
Chapter 5. Cartographic strategies to improve education by connecting modes of visualizing subjectivities (Fernando Hernández & Judit Onsés- University of Barcelona)
Chapter 6. The embodiment of place: entangled and felt (Trish Osler- Concordia University, Canada)
Chapter 7. Cartography as a filmic text: drifting to juxtapose the immaterial bodies and affects (Montse Rifà & Joanna Empain- Autonomous University of Barcelona)
Chapter 8. Project Affective Cartographies I. (Presentation of the project carried out at ConU, participants, the research process and cartography production) (Sara Carrasco- University University of Barcelona)
Chapter 9. Project Affective Cartographies II. (This section will refer to the dissemination of the project presenting both art exhibitions held at the Art Education Department- ConU) (Sara Carrasco- University of Barcelona)
Chapter 10. How data created can be fold/unfold/refold onto itself (Judit Onsès- University of Barcelona)
III. AFFECT, PEDAGOGIES AND RESEARCH
Chapter 11. The relevance of an embodied and affective learning on teachers’ cartographies (Fernando Hernández- University of Barcelona)
Chapter 12. Gendering an affective pedagogy: relational and ethical entanglements in the class (Silvia de Riba, University of Barcelona & Beatriz Revelles, Granada University)
Chapter 13. Researcher's engagement and participation-affects (Juana M. Sancho & Marina Riera- University of Barcelona)
Chapter 14. Recognizing ourselves in Otherness (Estibaliz Aberasturi & José Miguel Correa- University of the Basque Country)
Chapter 15. Affect as a never-ending movement cannot be trapped only cartographed. (Fabiana Paulino- University of Barcelona)
Sara Carrasco Segovia is Associate Professor in the Fine Art Faculty at the University of Barcelona, Spain, and Associate Professor in the Fine Art Faculty at the Autonomous University of Chile.
Fernando Hernández-Hernández is Professor of Contemporary Visualities, Psychology of Art and Arts-Based Research in the Unit of Cultural Pedagogies at the Fine Arts Faculty of the University of Barcelona, Spain.
Juana M. Sancho-Gil is Emeritus Professor of Educational Technologies in the Faculty of Education of the University of Barcelona, Spain, and Doctor Honoris Causa at the National Autonomous University of Mexico.
This book focuses on cartographies as epistemology and visual strategy, highlighting three major axes: corporeal, affective, and nomadic learning. Based on the onto-episte-methodological and ethical displacement from reductive approaches, the book emphasizes new ways of understanding arts, research, teaching and learning processes at the university and beyond. Contributions highlight practices focused on dialogue, sharing, readings and philosophical discussions which allow educators to move away from what is typically thought of as ‘correct’, and reinforce the importance of a decolonized approach to learning and knowledge, understanding the (re)search process as an imperfect journey in becoming.
Sara Carrasco Segovia is Associate Professor in the Fine Art Faculty at the University of Barcelona, Spain, and Associate Professor in the Fine Art Faculty at the Autonomous University of Chile.
Fernando Hernández-Hernández is Professor of Contemporary Visualities, Psychology of Art and Arts-Based Research in the Unit of Cultural Pedagogies at the Fine Arts Faculty of the University of Barcelona, Spain.
Juana M. Sancho-Gil is Emeritus Professor of Educational Technologies in the Faculty of Education of the University of Barcelona, Spain, and Doctor Honoris Causa at the National Autonomous University of Mexico.