Childhood and the Philosophy of Education: An Anti-Aristotelian Perspective: Continuum Studies in Educational Research
Autor Professor Andrew Stables Anthony Haynesen Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 dec 2008
This fascinating monograph seeks to overturn this philosophical tradition. It develops instead a "fully semiotic" perspective, arguing that in so far as children are no more or less interpreters of the world than adults, they are no more or less reasoning agents. This, the book shows, has radical implications, particularly for the question of how we seek to educate children. One Aristotelian legacy is the unquestioned belief that societies must educate the young irrespective of the latter's wishes. Another is that childhood must be grown out of and left behind.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780826499721
ISBN-10: 0826499724
Pagini: 210
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Seria Continuum Studies in Educational Research
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0826499724
Pagini: 210
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Seria Continuum Studies in Educational Research
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Challenges
many
of
the
dominant
assumptions
about
childhood,
such
as
the
desirability
increasing
compulsory
schooling.
Cuprins
Introduction:
The
conception
of
childhood
\Part I:
The
Aristotelian
Heritage
\1.1.
How
Anti-Aristotelian
can
one
be?
\
1.2.
Aristotle's
debt
to
Plato
\1.3.
Aristotle:
children
as
people
in
formation
\1.4. Histories
of
childhood:
footnotes
to
Aristotle?
\1.5.
Pessimism
and
sin:
the
Puritan
child
\1.6.
Optimism
and
enlightenment:
the
liberal
child
\1.7.
Trailing
clouds
of
glory:
the
romantic
child
\
1.8.
The
postmodern
child:
less
than
not
much?
\Part II:
A
Fully
Semiotic
View
of
Childhood
\2.1. Living
as
semiotic
engagement
\
2.2. The
meaning-making
semiotic
child
\
2.3
Learning
and
schooling:
Dewey
and
beyond
\Part III:
Education
Reconsidered
\3.1. The
roots
of
compulsory
schooling
\
3.2
The
extension
of
the
in-between
years
\
3.3
Teaching
for
significant
events:
identity
and
non-identity
\Part IV:
The
Child
in
Society
\4.1
The
child
and
the
law
\
4.2
Semiosis
and
social
policy
\
4.3 Doing children justice \ References \ Index
4.3 Doing children justice \ References \ Index
Recenzii
'What
would
it
mean
for
our
thinking
about
education,
and
in
particular,
our
institutional
arrangements
for
children's
education,
were
we
to
think
of
children
not
as
incomplete,
or
unprepared
for
the
separate
world
of
adults,
but
as
semiotic
engagers
in
life
alongside
adults?
Andrew
Stables
explores
the
radical
implications
of
this
question
in
a
lively
and
accessible
manner,
offering,
along
the
way,
a
fascinating
account
of
some
central
themes
in
the
history
and
philosophy
of
childhood,
and
addressing
the
implications
for
our
conceptualization
of
childhood
and
adulthood
of
some
important
strands
in
contemporary
social
and
political
theory,
including
environmental
ethics,
post-humanism
and
post-modernism.
Whether
or
not
one
is
convinced
by
Stables'
claim
that
a
reconceptualization
of
childhood
is
due,
his
analysis
certainly
offers
a
stimulating
challenge
to
some
existing
conceptualizations.'
Judith
Suissa,
Senior
Lecturer
in
Philosophy
of
Education,
Institute
of
Education,
University
of
London,
UK
'Too often, in recent years, there has been a propensity for academics writing about childhood, children's voice and growing up to offer a totalising constructionist account on the basis of too little evidence and a too unsubtle analysis. Here, Andrew Stables offers an antidote to the easy bon mot. His account of childhood relies on a careful reading of a range of historical and philosophical sources. Moreover he carefully explores the educational implications of his analysis of childhood; an analysis that avoids the twin perils of a crass essentialism on the one hand and a rootless deconstructed account on the other. To do so he draws on semiotic work to look at children as sign makers in their own right. Not everyone will agree with everything in Stables' book, but for those interested in thinking about childhood and education, it is a must read.' Professor James C Conroy, Dean of the Faculty of Education, University of Glasgow, UK
'Overall, the book provides a very interesting contribution to literature in child studies and education. Despite Stables' strong analytical-philosophical approach, the book covers a wide range of disciplines including history, ethics, environmental studies, pedagogy and political science...Stables' theory of living as semiotic engagement provides a unique and promising conceptual framework for the study of childhood and educational experience.' Environmental Education Research
Andrew Stables has written an impressive and exciting book. Childhood and the Philosophy of Education is an ambitious project that opens up new ways of thinking about childhood, learning and education
Andrew Stables has written an impressive and exciting book... the way in which Stables brings a wide range of ideas to bear on his exploration of complex themes and issues is a worthwhile and at times really innovative contribution to the field.
'Too often, in recent years, there has been a propensity for academics writing about childhood, children's voice and growing up to offer a totalising constructionist account on the basis of too little evidence and a too unsubtle analysis. Here, Andrew Stables offers an antidote to the easy bon mot. His account of childhood relies on a careful reading of a range of historical and philosophical sources. Moreover he carefully explores the educational implications of his analysis of childhood; an analysis that avoids the twin perils of a crass essentialism on the one hand and a rootless deconstructed account on the other. To do so he draws on semiotic work to look at children as sign makers in their own right. Not everyone will agree with everything in Stables' book, but for those interested in thinking about childhood and education, it is a must read.' Professor James C Conroy, Dean of the Faculty of Education, University of Glasgow, UK
'Overall, the book provides a very interesting contribution to literature in child studies and education. Despite Stables' strong analytical-philosophical approach, the book covers a wide range of disciplines including history, ethics, environmental studies, pedagogy and political science...Stables' theory of living as semiotic engagement provides a unique and promising conceptual framework for the study of childhood and educational experience.' Environmental Education Research
Andrew Stables has written an impressive and exciting book. Childhood and the Philosophy of Education is an ambitious project that opens up new ways of thinking about childhood, learning and education
Andrew Stables has written an impressive and exciting book... the way in which Stables brings a wide range of ideas to bear on his exploration of complex themes and issues is a worthwhile and at times really innovative contribution to the field.
Notă biografică
Andrew Stables in Professor of Education and Philosophy in the Department of Education at the University of Bath, UK.