"Bradley and Kennedy’s collaboration on Stiegler as a philosopher of education brings together thinkers from the US, Australia, Cyprus, England, Finland, Ireland, Japan and South Korea as a joint response to the proletarianization – or de- individuation – of education. I enjoyed the fact that the collection includes established academics, doctoral students and practitioners, and that it draws on the full range of Stiegler’s work, including his most recent work and some work yet to be translated in English. The edited collection is the first book to focus on educational thought and the philosophy of this important and topical thinker."
Sean Sturm, Philosopher of Education, University of Auckland, New Zealand
"Bradley and Kennedy’s seminal contribution to the philosophy of education will no doubt pioneer a new field of research applying Bernard Stiegler’s work to the stark realities confronting young people in the 21st century in the hope of finding pedagogical inventions and tools to respond to our collective crisis."
David R. Cole, Philosopher of Education, Western Sydney University, Australia
"This volume ambitiously locates and illuminates Stiegler’s philosophy and critique of technology within the territory of education and reveals how his philosophy links with the praxis of disce doce (learning to teach). The editors’ intention is timely and is a superb academic contribution to the study of Stiegler’s philosophy and the philosophy of education. Trailblazing and thrilling."
Alex Taek- Gwang Lee, Philosopher, Kyung Hee University, Seoul, South Korea
"The purpose of this timely book, the application of Bernard Stiegler’s ideas to pedagogy and philosophy of education, is a most welcome addition to Stiegler studies. Stiegler himself hoped that the significance and consequences of his ideas would become most salient in educational reform. The journal I edit at the University of Guam, Micronesian Studies, has been committed to publishing and reviewing Stiegler scholarship for some years now, and we look forward to reviewing this book as soon as it leaves the press."
C. S. Schreiner, Professor of English and Philosophy, University of Guam, USA
"Bernard Stiegler implores us to create a new society, one that is centred around learning. The authors in this collection provide the Stieglerian tools for how to achieve the models required to realise new ways for learning and working together. Required reading for all interested in the political possibilities of education, technology and creative philosophy."
Felicity Colman, Professor of Media Arts, University of the Arts, London, UK
Obituary: Bernard Stiegler, philosopher of reorientation
Joff P. N. Bradley
Introduction: Stiegler as philosopher of education
Joff P. N. Bradley and David Kennedy
Part I: Retentions
1. The problem of now: Bernard Stiegler and the student as consumer
Kristy Forrest
2. Questions concerning attention and Stiegler’s therapeutics
Noel Fitzpatrick
3. Heidegger and Stiegler on failure and technology
Ruth Irwin
4. Educational methods and cognitive modes: Focusing on the difference between Bernard Stiegler and N. Katherine Hayles
Sunji Lee
5. Politics of digital learning—Thinking education with Bernard Stiegler
Susanna Lindberg
Part II: Protentions
6. Rhythmic nootechnics: Stiegler, Whitehead, and noetic life
Conor Heaney
7. Stiegler’s ecological thought: The politics of knowledge in the Anthropocene
Mark Featherstone
8. On the organology of utopia: Stiegler's contribution to the philosophy of education
Joff P. N. Bradley and David Kennedy
9. What is in a child’s hand? Prosthesis in Bernard Stiegler: Some implications for a future philosophy of childhood
Anna Kouppanou
10. Negen-u-topic becoming: On the reinvention of youth
Joff P. N. Bradley
11. The university of the future: Stiegler after Derrida
Constance L. Mui and Julien S. Murphy
Afterword: From ‘Dare to Think!’ to ‘How Dare You!’ and back again
Daniel Ross
Joff P. N. Bradley is Professor of English and Philosophy in the Faculty of Foreign Languages at Teikyo University, Tokyo, Japan. Joff is Visiting Professor at Jamia Millia Islamia University in New Delhi, India, and Visiting Research Fellow at Kyung Hee University in Seoul, South Korea.
David Kennedy is Associate Professor in the College of Commerce at Nihon University, Tokyo, Japan.