|
Pedagogy, Oppression and Transformation in a 'Post-Critical' Climate: The Return of Freirean Thinking
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Title |
Pedagogy, Oppression and Transformation in a 'Post-Critical' Climate: The Return of Freirean Thinking
|
Authors and Contributors |
Edited by Dr Andrew O'Shea
|
|
Edited by Maeve O'Brien
|
Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback / softback | Pages:192 | Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 156 |
|
ISBN/Barcode |
9781472507280
|
Classifications | Dewey:370.115 |
---|
Audience | Tertiary Education (US: College) | Professional & Vocational | |
Illustrations |
5 illus
|
|
Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
|
Imprint |
Bloomsbury Academic
|
Publication Date |
28 March 2013 |
Publication Country |
United Kingdom
|
Description
Pedagogy, Oppression and Transformation in a 'Post-Critical' Climate provides an urgent reflection on Freire's work, in particular his central principles of pedagogy and praxis, offering a variety of critical responses from philosophical, sociological and egalitarian perspectives. The editors explore whether Freire's revolutionary work has stood the test of time and its relevance to educational discourses today - discourses that frequently contest the ontological and historical aspects of human development While Freire's work emerged as a response to the problem of providing a transformative educational praxis for justice and equality within a specific cultural and economic milieu, Pedagogy, Oppression and Transformation in a 'Post-Critical' Climate seeks to explore the value and possibilities of transformative praxis in perpetually diverse educational settings and within an increasingly divided globalised world. By building on the earlier emancipatory approach of Freire's Pedagogy of the Oppressed, it creates an international conversation between academics, educational practitioners and community activists for a new generation.
Author Biography
Andrew O'Shea is Lecturer in Philosophy of Education and Human Development at St. Patrick's College, Dublin City University, Ireland. Maeve O'Brien is Senior Lecturer in Sociology and Co-ordinator of Human Development at St. Patrick's College, Dublin City University, Ireland.
ReviewsThis book provides a thoughtful reassessment of the work of Paulo Freire against the background of recent developments in the theory and practice of education. It provides a powerful reminder of the need to bring the personal back into the political project that education ultimately is. -- Gert Biesta, Professor of Education, University of Stirling, UK This text is timely, prescient, passionate and purposeful, bringing together a set of powerful voices, perspectives and dispositions that breathe new possibilities into pedagogies more likely to liberate and transform than oppress and marginalise ... an important contribution to contemporary educational discourses that is at once deeply humanising, enriching and rewarding. Read it, and be inspired to continue Freire's transformative agenda. -- Ciaran Sugrue, Professor of Education, University College Dublin, Ireland This compelling book is an important challenge to the new framing of education in a post-critical climate. It addresses the question of educational transformation by exploring the potential in Freire's work for liberation through radical pedagogy and praxis that takes relationality and the affective domain of life seriously. -- Diane Reay, Professor of Education, University of Cambridge, UK During his life-time, no voice in education was more powerful or distinctive than that of Paulo Freire. Why is this voice still so alive in contemporary education? How does it still speak to economic, political and cultural realities very different from those that Freire himself addressed? And how does his philosophy - with its peculiar synthesis of Marxist, existentialist and Christian influences, and its unabashed avowal of "humanisation" - withstand the post-structuralist revolution in contemporary theory and the 'post-humanism' that it announces? To recycle the catch-phrases of his writings was never to be Freirean. But, in this new climate, can any voice be truly Freirean? Anyone interested in these questions, and their heavy implications for how we practice and think about education, can do no better than to read this book. -- Joseph Dunne, Cregan Professor, Principal Lecturer in Education and Head of Human Development, St. Patrick's College, Dublin City University, Ireland
|