ISBN-13: 9780367897710 / Angielski / Twarda / 2020 / 356 str.
ISBN-13: 9780367897710 / Angielski / Twarda / 2020 / 356 str.
This book brings together the work of over two-hundred international scholars, who seek to address the question, ‘What happened to postmodernism in educational theory after its alleged demise?’.This book was originally published as a special 50th anniversary issue of the journal, Educational Philosophy and Theory.
1. PESA President’s foreword for the EPAT 50th-anniversary issue
Tina (A. C.) Besley
2. Introduction: After postmodernism in educational theory? A collective writing experiment and thought survey
Michael A. Peters, Marek Tesar, and Liz Jackson
Postmodern Thinking
3. After postmodernism: retuning to the real
Michael Bonnett
4. Education and the hegemony of the rich
Kevin Williams
5. Wild and small
Charles Tocci
6. Modernity is back
Kristof K. P. Vanhoutte
7. The day after: education in the postmodernist fallout
Sharon Rider
8. Knowledge and politics
Elizabeth Rata
9. Had enough of experts?
Michael Gallagher
10. We have never been postmodern
Iain Thomson
11. After postmodernism: anti-fascist theories
Kathryn J. Strom
12. Independent educational theory
Doron Yosef-Hassidim
13. Education and theory returning to life itself
Keumjoong Hwang
14. Postmodernism in post-truth times
Kevin Kester
15. The legacy of postmodernism in educational theory
Mark Murphy
16. Not so fast: Why the linear proposition of an after?
Ana Cristina Zimmermann and Soraia Chung Saura
17. Poststructuralism, postmodernism or deconstruction? The future of metaphysics, philosophy and thinking in the field of education
Nick Peim
18. Earth comes after postmodernism
Clarence W. Joldersma
19. The discursive field of ‘after’ postmodernism in educational theory
Steven Camicia
20. Studying postmodernism
Tyson E. Lewis
21. After postmodernism, a renewed critical realism—and the implications for education
Mark Mason
22. Peter Boghossian—What comes after postmodernism?
Peter Boghossian and James Lindsay
23. Are we asking the right question? The problem with ‘afters’
Richard Edwards
Postmodern Politics
24. ‘Post-truth’: political death of the expert
John Clark
25. The spectral educationist
Chris Peers
26. Moral realism versus moral relativism in the postmodern myth
Jesse John Fleay
27. Metanarratives are doing just fine: a word or two from Asia
Jae Park
28. Postmodernity and its clowns
Johannes Drerup
29. The ‘post-post-modern’ era
Luke Strongman
30. What comes after postmodernism?
Peter Pericles Trifonas
31. The waning of postmodernism and the return of (a materialist) History
Jesse Bazzul
32. PoMo is dead. And we were late for cremation ceremony because we were doing something else
Engin Yurt
33. Knowledge ecologies after postmodernity
Ruth Irwin
34. Are we racing to the data-ism in education?
Hongbiao Yin
35. My Angelus Militans
Joff P. N. Bradley
36. Subject and justice: Žižek and Tiantai Buddhism Sevket
Benhur Oral
37. The philosophical consciousness of the interconnected universe
Xu Di
38. Postpostmodernism: a call to optimism
Laura D’Olimpio
39. The storm from paradise
Jon Nixon
40. Capital whisperers and POMOs
Georgina Murray
41. Thoughts about becoming a desired memory
P. Taylor Webb
42. Post-colorblindness; Or, racialized speech after symbolic racism
Zeus Leonardo and Ezekiel Dixon-Román
43. Recalibration of post modernism with earth in mind
Heesoon Bai, Muga Miyakawa, and Charles Scott
44. Postmodernism as an epistemological phenomenon
George Lăzăroiu
45. A transcending a single reality
Paul Gibbs
Postmodern Crossdisciplines
46. The dual-impulse of modernity
Ariel Sarid
47. Toward a new psychology
Jonathan Doner
48. What science means for postmodernist epistemology and the philosophy of education
Thaddeus Metz
49. Modern, postmodern, amodern
William P. Fisher Jr.
50. Learning Chinese visual culture in a transnational world
David Bell
51. The Postmodern Baby? Language-Historical Realism
Russell Hvolbek
52. After postmodernism in educational theory?
Manfred Man-fat Wu
53. Nostalgia and shrinkage: Philosophy and culture under post-postmodern conditions
Peter Strandbrink
54. Possibility spaces: Traversing and as educational theory
Anita Sinner
55. Postmodernism, science education and the slippery slope to the epistemic crisis
Renia Gasparatou
56. Post-humanism or posthuman-ism? A redemption and a hope
Guoping Zhao
57. ‘Neo’ is not enough: Theorizing and educating in a time of total renegotiation
Sean Blenkinsop
58. Do philosophers of education dare be inspired by forerunners such as Nietzsche? –Transformation of the mind towards an affirmative and generative awarenesss
Henriëtta Joosten
59. Education in virtual age
Asiye Toker Gokce
60. What comes after postmodernism?—Material making, creative production and artistic figuration as ways to re-organize pedagogical culture
Rikke Platz Cortsen and Anne Mette W. Nielsen
61. Physical education—educating bodies after postmodernism?
Håkan Larsson
62. Out of focus: modernism and the educational meta-challenge
Spyridon Stelios
Non-Western Postmodernism
63. From post-modernism to modernity again. From modernity to a paradigm shift
Albert Ferrer
64. The death of postmodernism in indigenous educational theory
Georgina Stewart
65. African philosophies of education re-imagined: Looking beyond postmodernism
Yusef Waghid
66. On the problematique of decolonisation as a post-colonial endeavour
Nuraan Davids
67. After postmodernism: Working woke in the neoliberal era
D. Edward Boucher and Christine Clark
68. Confucian philosophy: After postmodernism
Jinhua Song
69. The paradox of post-postmodernism
Seungho Moon
70. The emergence of moral bliss
Hsin-Chi Ko
71. A Daoist perspective: An opportunity after postmodernism
Wilma J. Maki
72. What comes after postmodernism and how this will affect educational theory? – From a Chinese Taoist perspective
Fan Yang
73. Postmodern education and the challenges facing Chinese postmodern scholars
Wang Chengbing
Postmodern Critiques
74. Isn’t it ironic? No, it’s not: Postmodernism’s coincidental scepticism
Dustin Hellberg
75. At the wake, or the return of metaphysics
Johan Dahlbeck
76. Overcoming the New Stupidity
Steven L. Goldman
77. Integral education within metamodernism
Jody S. Piro
78. After postmodernism: A dialogical paradigm
Cheu-jey Lee
79. We need not take sides, we need not guess what will come next
Zvi Bekerman
80. Albert Camus and the lifecycle of postmodernism
Aidan Hobson
81. The ghost of realism hunts postmodernism
Khosrwo Bagheri Noaparast
82. Educational theory the day after postmodernism
Anna Kouppanou
83. Ethic authorial dialogism as a candidate for post-postmodernism
Eugene Matusov
84. Postmodernism: Memory and oblivion
Ruyu Hung
85. The age of the educational philosophy of shared doctrine
Chi-Ying Chien
86. Seeking wisdom after postmodernism: Back to Plato
Christopher Coney
87. Practical reason and a dialogical attitude after postmodernity
Ignacio Serrano del Pozo
88. What can beliefs do? Ethics education and authenticity after postmodernism
Karl Kitching
89. Has postmodernism the potential to reshape educational research and practice?
Gheorghe H. Popescu
90. Postmodernism pace postmodernity?
Ian Leask
91. Beyond Mo and PoMo: trans-education for living well in a sustainable world
Marina García-Carmona and Fernando García-Quero
Postmodern Legacies
92. Spectral post(s)
Nesta Devine
93. Comparativism
Jean Pierre Elonga Mboyo
94. Postmodernism in education: Blessing or curse?
Terence Lovat
95. After postmodernism in Educational (Philosophy and) Theory
Bruce Haynes
96. The open and the global: Postmodernism and its legacy
Jonas Holst
97. Elephants and riders in the postmodern era
Stephanie Chitpin
98. Why not going back to modernity after postmodernity? Revisiting the thought of Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Gustavo Araújo Batista
99. The legacy of postmodernism in popular thought and the emergence of "Inter/trans relational" -isms in educational theory
Joseph Levitan
100. Dwelling in the not-yet. Education as embodied paradox
Vasco d’Agnese
101. After postmodernism: Asking the right question
Joris Vlieghe and Piotr Zamojski
102. Fiction and learning realities after postmodernism
Viktor Johansson
103. Sapere aude revisited and revised
Anders Buch and Joakim Juhl
104. Hegemony or philosophy? On the legacy of postmodernism
Hektor K. T. Yan
105. The potential of Spinoza’s not-yet for educational theory
Margaret Walshaw
106. Interpretative judgements and educational assessment
Patrick Aidan Williams
107. From the postmodern to the ecological
Mark Featherstone
108. The era after postmodernism – time to retrospect humanism
Hongyun Wu
109. Is Pomo dead?
Tanja Mansfeld
110. Paradigms of education research
Tien-Hui Chiang
Postmodern Education
111. Identity performativity and precarity
Jenna Nelson
112. Out with the old, in with the digital
Matthew Metzgar
113. Multidimensional thinking in a digimodernist world
Chi-Ming Lam
114. Back to praxis—On reviving the commitment to the transformation of educational reality in practice
Boaz Tsabar
115. Before, now and after
Marianna Papastephanou
116. Post-postmodernism and the problem of dissonance in Educational Theory
Tomasz Leś
117. Dialogue in critical times
Alan Cottey
118. Education for modest enlightenment
Eran Gusacov
119. The University after postmodernism: An ecological approach
Ronald Barnett
120. After postmodernism: meaning of life and education
Iddo Landau
121. The alien university
Søren S.E. Bengtsen
122. Postmodern communism: An educational constellation
Derek R. Ford
123. The need for Po-Mo in educational theory is greater than ever
Marilyn Fleer
124. DOA: Is the ‘new’ still alive?
Gerald Argenton
125. Nietzsche and Heidegger: PoPoMo philosophers avant la letter
Charles C. Verharen
126. What comes after post/modern peace education?
Hilary Cremin
127. Beyond modernism and postmodernism in educational theory and practice: A marriage of grounds
John Quay
128. The politics after postmodernism begins with the political economy of our own work
John Willinsky
129. After postmodernism … let’s talk about education
Gert Biesta
130. Education in the era of transit
Tetiana Matusevych
131. Disruption of the individual’s relationship with the state as a problem of collective intelligence
Richard Heraud
132. Thinking about learning in apocalyptic times
Georgina Stewart
133. The ascendance of postmodernism in the educational sphere
Ramona Mihăilă
Postmodern New Ontologies
134. My ordinary r/evolutions
Anne B. Reinertsen
135. After postmodernism in educational theory?
Andrew Stables
136. After history; after postmodernism?
David Lundie
137. Playing with come: a perverse response
Adam J. Greteman
138. Postmodernism is not dead
Elizabeth Adams St. Pierre
139. The nuances of posthumanism
Jennifer Charteris
140. Through a portal and finding remnants: An incomplete report
John A. Weaver
141. Beauty’s radical
Maya Pindyck
142. Versions-to-come
Susan Naomi Nordstrom
143. Anthropocene’s time
Margaret Somerville
144. A philosophy not of paper (y Buen Vivir)
Jasmine Brooke Ulmer
145. Living and thinking the event
Maria Tamboukou
146. After postmodernism comes …bridging between deconstruction and (re)construction in educational theory and practice
Tine Lynfort Jensen
147. The return of the untimely: Renaming strange time
Zofia Zaliwska
148. A (re)turn to realism(s)
Lesley Le Grange
149. After the ‘post’: anthropocenes
Iris Duhn
150. Essentializing postmodernity
Thomas Aastrup Rømer
151. Keeping the question ‘what comes after postmodernism?’ open
Karin Murris
152. What new sensibility, configuration or ‘dominant’ logic now for educational theory?
Patti Lather
Postmodern Theory
153. Education [After Êduco]
Mark Jackson
154. After postmodernism, technologism
Raya A. Jones
155. Mourning postmodernism in educational theory
Michalinos Zembylas
156. If pragmatism ever arrives
Jim Garrison
157. Play, puerilism, and post-modernism
W. John Morgan
158. What comes after postmodernism? Going fishing
Barbara J. Thayer-Bacon
159. Modernity, postmodernity, hypermodernity and the ever uncertain (educational) future
Manuel Ferraz-Lorenzo
160. An argument for what comes after postmodernism, and perhaps all future -isms
Haroldo A. Fontaine
161. The aesthetics of cyber-(post-)modernism
Gerold Necker
162. Postmodernism—know thyself
Nigel Tubbs
163. What? Comes after postmodernism
Itay Snir
164. Postmodern as secularization in philosophy of education
Leena Kakkori
165. Education towards a new modernity
Christoph Teschers
166. Educational theory without labels
Clinton Golding
167. Bringing space to the fore: Beyond postmodernism to interrogating fundamental malleable spatial preconditions for language and experience
Paul Downes
168. After postmodernism in educational theory?
Rupert Higham
169. Tolls
Maria O’Connor
170. Toward high entropy
Leander Penaso Marquez
171. Realism after postmodernism
Brian D. Haig
172. After postmodernism in educational theory?
Jan Jagodzinski
173. The postsecular moment in education: toward pedagogies of difference
Hanan A. Alexander
174. The social concretisation of educational postmodernism
Elvira Nica
175. Conclusion
Michael A. Peters, Marek Tesar, and Liz Jackson
1997-2024 DolnySlask.com Agencja Internetowa