Interpretive Pedagogies for Higher Education: Arendt, Berger, Said, Nussbaum and their Legacies
Autor Professor Jon Nixonen Limba Engleză Hardback – 28 mar 2012
Interpretive Pedagogies for Higher Education focuses on providing a humanistic perspective on pedagogy by relating it to the interpretive practices of particular public educators: thinkers and writers whose work has had an immeasurable impact on how we understand and interpret the world and how our understandings and interpretations act on that world.
Jon Nixon focuses on the work of four public intellectuals each of whom reaches out to a wide public readership and develops our understanding regarding the nature of interpretation in the everyday world: Hannah Arendt's work on 'representative thinking', John Berger's injunction to 'hold everything dear', Edward Said's notion of 'democratic criticism', and Martha Nussbaum's studies in the intelligence of feeling. These thinkers provide valuable perspectives on the nature and purpose of interpretation in everyday life. The implications of these perspectives for the development of a transformative pedagogy - and for the renewal of an educated public - are examined in relation to the current contexts of higher education within a knowledge society.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781441117151
ISBN-10: 1441117156
Pagini: 192
Ilustrații: black & white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1441117156
Pagini: 192
Ilustrații: black & white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Descriere
Provides a humanistic perspective on pedagogy by relating it to the interpretive practices of particular public educators: thinkers and writers whose work has had an immeasurable impact on how we understand and interpret the world and how our understandings and interpretations act on that world.
Caracteristici
Provides signposts to new possibilities for those working in higher education whatever their institutional setting
Notă biografică
Jon Nixon holds an honorary chair at the University of Sheffield, UK, and is Senior Research Fellow in the Centre for Lifelong Learning Research and Development at the Hong Kong Institute of Education, Hong Kong.
Cuprins
PrefaceAcknowledgementsPart I: Origins1. The Place of Pedagogy2. Public Education3. The Interpretive TraditionPart II: The Legacy4. Becoming Thoughtful: Hannah Arendt (1906-1975)5.Becoming Attentive: John Berger (b.1926)6. Becoming Worldly: Edward W. Said (1935-2003)7. Becoming Responsive: Martha C. Nussbaum (b.1947)Part III: The Futures8. Open Futures9. Educated Publics10. Pedagogic SpacesReferencesIndex
Recenzii
At a time of significant financial uncertainty for universities and renewed hesitations in government and the public mind about what constitutes public and private interests, this book asks fundamental questions about the purpose and place of higher education in a globalized world. Developing interpretive enquiry within universities is a fundamental condition for creating the intellectual means of living in a "common world". This idea is developed throughout this book, and the case for this fundamental aim for higher education is made with illuminating clarity. Jon Nixon provides the opportunity of a compelling encounter with seminal texts for those seeking to problematize pedagogies and practices in higher education.
This book is elegantly written and thought-provoking. Jon Nixon has offered us a desperately needed humanistic perspective on pedagogy and its implications for academic practice and beyond. A must read for those who are genuinely concerned with the current status of higher education.
Considered and considerate: this book from Jon Nixon paints a large and innovative canvas against which to view pedagogy in higher education. In giving us insights into the work of Arendt, Berger, Said and Nussbaum, the creative possibilities of scholarship are revealed, with a new curricular framework unfolding before the reader. It is a work to which I shall want to return.
Nixon shows how the interaction between different fields of expertise provides a means for understanding the globalised world. Nixon's excellent analysis of the work of key public educators and their legacy for higher education invites the reader to think critically about higher education's social role in a democratic society in the era of cosmopolitanism and how pedagogy as a practice can contribute in this. This book is an invaluable read for anyone concerned about the future of higher education in the 21st century.
Drawing inspiration from key thinkers about education and society, he provides the reader with a roadmap which reconnects pedagogy with the public and educative purposes of the university. In so doing Jon Nixon helps to reclaim the notion of the public good in higher education.
By exploring the work of Arendt, Berger, Said and Nussbaum, Jon Nixon offers an excellent analysis on the epistemological and ethical implications of their contributions to the nature of interpretation as well as education. He provides a rich and much-needed conceptual framework for a pedagogical practice at the university, suited to the challenges of globalisation and the further development of democracy in the present and future.
This book is elegantly written and thought-provoking. Jon Nixon has offered us a desperately needed humanistic perspective on pedagogy and its implications for academic practice and beyond. A must read for those who are genuinely concerned with the current status of higher education.
Considered and considerate: this book from Jon Nixon paints a large and innovative canvas against which to view pedagogy in higher education. In giving us insights into the work of Arendt, Berger, Said and Nussbaum, the creative possibilities of scholarship are revealed, with a new curricular framework unfolding before the reader. It is a work to which I shall want to return.
Nixon shows how the interaction between different fields of expertise provides a means for understanding the globalised world. Nixon's excellent analysis of the work of key public educators and their legacy for higher education invites the reader to think critically about higher education's social role in a democratic society in the era of cosmopolitanism and how pedagogy as a practice can contribute in this. This book is an invaluable read for anyone concerned about the future of higher education in the 21st century.
Drawing inspiration from key thinkers about education and society, he provides the reader with a roadmap which reconnects pedagogy with the public and educative purposes of the university. In so doing Jon Nixon helps to reclaim the notion of the public good in higher education.
By exploring the work of Arendt, Berger, Said and Nussbaum, Jon Nixon offers an excellent analysis on the epistemological and ethical implications of their contributions to the nature of interpretation as well as education. He provides a rich and much-needed conceptual framework for a pedagogical practice at the university, suited to the challenges of globalisation and the further development of democracy in the present and future.