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Subversive Pedagogies Kate Schick (Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington, NZ.)

Subversive Pedagogies By Kate Schick (Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington, NZ.)

Subversive Pedagogies by Kate Schick (Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington, NZ.)


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Summary

This interdisciplinary volume examines the place of critical and creative pedagogies in the academy and beyond, offering insights from leading and emerging international theorists and scholar-activists on innovative theoretical and practical interventions for the classroom, the university, and the public sphere.

Subversive Pedagogies Summary

Subversive Pedagogies: Radical Possibility in the Academy by Kate Schick (Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington, NZ.)

  • Broadens engagement with critical pedagogies in IR and the academy. This book supports educators and students seeking to understand and enact critical pedagogies in their classrooms, institutions, and beyond, through theoretical and practical pedagogical innovations.
  • Features a line-up of leading and emerging international scholars and activists contributing original essays that open up provocative lines of inquiry and critique about critical pedagogies as sites of political engagement.
  • Highlights unconventional sites of learning, such as public spaces, as well as Indigenous pedagogies and possibilities for decolonisation. The innovative contributions also centre marginalised voices and perspectives, broadening engagement with often overlooked perspectives.
  • Offers both theoretical and practical contributions for educators and students wishing to deepen their engagement with critical pedagogies.

Subversive Pedagogies Reviews

What does it mean to educate from multiple perspectives? This evocative and necessary collection addresses those who want to teach outside of traditional historical assumptions. Subversive Pedagogies highlights the complexities of colonialism, treaties, land, dispossession, gender, activism, and change when dominant educational systems explore their own iniquities and oppressions in the classroom. At times, such teaching proves futile; it also proves essential. From the powerlessness of being a student to the embodiment of being a professor, from building alliances with Mi'kmaq water protectors to creative truth-telling about the occupation of Maori lands, from transforming the pedagogical frameworks of the classroom to building justice in unjust institutions, the complexity and honesty of these essays provide an invaluable guide for the committed teacher. The book demonstrates how to work within neoliberal and imperial institutions, illustrating how their strategies and experiences can transform our very understanding of education's possibilities.

Kennan R. Ferguson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, USA.

This book breathes back sinews and flesh onto the exhausted bones of pedagogies in Higher Education. It asks, can these bones of broken, cartesian pedagogies live? And it then finds answers in places where vulnerability is held safely; where visions are embodied, where failure is a finding and where young and old may dream dreams of relation and joy. It is a life-giving book for draining times. Can these bones live? Read and find out how?

Alison Phipps, UNESCO Chair for Refugee Integration through Languages and Arts, University of Glasgow, Scotland.

This edited collection affirms that to teach global politics rigorously is to teach it subversively, and that to do so might require pedagogies that embrace joy and love. This is a much needed book that will help us to find our way through and beyond present-day managerial and reactionary assaults on university teaching worldwide.

Robbie Shilliam, Johns Hopkins University, USA.

In a moment when so much of the learning needed to midwife the flourishing of non-colonial, non-capitalist forms of life is being suffocated by the ongoing project of colonial modernity, this book shows how subverting its deadly logics is a way of 'drawing breath' with other possibilities. Vibrant examples of embodied, relational and place-based pedagogies both within and beyond universities from around the world open onto an expanded landscape of activism that reveals already-existing spaces of possibility within the system and gestures towards alternative futures.

Sarah Amsler, University of Nottingham, UK.


What does it mean to educate from multiple perspectives? This evocative and necessary collection addresses those who want to teach outside of traditional historical assumptions. Subversive Pedagogies highlights the complexities of colonialism, treaties, land, dispossession, gender, activism, and change when dominant educational systems explore their own iniquities and oppressions in the classroom. At times, such teaching proves futile; it also proves essential. From the powerlessness of being a student to the embodiment of being a professor, from building alliances with Mi'kmaq water protectors to creative truth-telling about the occupation of Maori lands, from transforming the pedagogical frameworks of the classroom to building justice in unjust institutions, the complexity and honesty of these essays provide an invaluable guide for the committed teacher. The book demonstrates how to work within neoliberal and imperial institutions, illustrating how their strategies and experiences can transform our very understanding of education's possibilities.

Kennan R. Ferguson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, USA.

This book breathes back sinews and flesh onto the exhausted bones of pedagogies in Higher Education. It asks, can these bones of broken, cartesian pedagogies live? And it then finds answers in places where vulnerability is held safely; where visions are embodied, where failure is a finding and where young and old may dream dreams of relation and joy. It is a life-giving book for draining times. Can these bones live? Read and find out how?

Alison Phipps, UNESCO Chair for Refugee Integration through Languages and Arts, University of Glasgow, Scotland.

This edited collection affirms that to teach global politics rigorously is to teach it subversively, and that to do so might require pedagogies that embrace joy and love. This is a much needed book that will help us to find our way through and beyond present-day managerial and reactionary assaults on university teaching worldwide.

Robbie Shilliam, Johns Hopkins University, USA.

In a moment when so much of the learning needed to midwife the flourishing of non-colonial, non-capitalist forms of life is being suffocated by the ongoing project of colonial modernity, this book shows how subverting its deadly logics is a way of 'drawing breath' with other possibilities. Vibrant examples of embodied, relational and place-based pedagogies both within and beyond universities from around the world open onto an expanded landscape of activism that reveals already-existing spaces of possibility within the system and gestures towards alternative futures.

Sarah Amsler, University of Nottingham, UK.

About Kate Schick (Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington, NZ.)

Kate Schick is Senior Lecturer in International Relations at Te Herenga Waka - Victoria University of Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand.

Claire Timperley is a Lecturer in Political Science at Te Herenga Waka - Victoria University of Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand.

Table of Contents

Foreword Part I. Institutional Constraints and Possibilities Chapter 1: Reflections toward a Transformative Movement for Radical Democratic and Ecological Pedagogy Chapter 2: Tunga ki te marae, tau ana: Culturally Transformative Learning in Universities Chapter 3: Responding to the Neoliberal University: Against Melancholic 'Wellbeing' and Towards Mourning Part II. Radical Possibilities Within the Classroom Chapter 4: Pupils Dilated: Towards a Pedagogy of Emergence Chapter 5: Uncertain Pedagogies: Cultivating Micro-Communities of Learning Chapter 6: 'To Read What Was Never Written': Embracing Embodied Pedagogies Chapter 7: Virtual War Part III. Beyond the Academy: Creative and Activist Engagement Chapter 8: Solidarity is a Verb: Teaching Development Activism on Stolen Territory Chapter 9: Thinking Again with Captain Cook Chapter 10: The Emotional Expression of Solidarity: The Subversive Potential of Collective Emotions In and Beyond the Classroom Chapter 11: They Want Our Bodies But They Don't Want Us

Additional information

NLS9781032108148
9781032108148
1032108142
Subversive Pedagogies: Radical Possibility in the Academy by Kate Schick (Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington, NZ.)
New
Paperback
Taylor & Francis Ltd
2021-11-30
224
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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