Available Formats
Hannah Arendt on Educational Thinking and Practice in Dark Times: Education for a World in Crisis
By (Author) Wayne Veck
Edited by Professor Helen M. Gunter
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
26th August 2021
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Educational administration and organization
370.1
Paperback
200
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
286g
In her renowned and provocative essay, The Crisis in Education, Hannah Arendt observed that a crisis becomes a disaster only when we respond to it with preformed judgements, that is, with prejudices. Taken as a whole, Arendts work provides an enduring provocation to think and to make judgements about education and the issues that impact on it, such as political, economic and cultural disruption and uncertainty. Drawing together the leading thinkers on Arendtian ideas and education, this collection explores the role and promise education can have in preparing the future generation to understand, to think about and to act within the world. Concluding the same essay on the crisis in education, Arendt declared education to be the point at which love for the world meets love for those who are newcomers to it. The authors respond to Arendts call for responsibility and authority in education, providing a leading edge thinking, analysis and agenda setting for public education systems and the world in dark times.
This compelling collection will be of interest to anyone seeking alternative perspectives on education to those which currently dominate. Each essay demands thoughtfulness in the process of reading, and subsequently, our research and practice, in order to enact our natality on the world. * Educational Review *
An outstanding collection of essays that puts Hannah Arendt into conversation with pressing educational issues from todays global refugee crisis as it pertains to the rise of populist movements and renationalization trends to putting the public back in public education. A must read. * Hannah Spector, Associate Professor of Education, Pennsylvania State University, USA *
Many enduring lessons are on offer in this volume, which advances Arendtian scholarship as well as educational thought, and itself embodies the thoughtful research it calls out for. * Phenomenological Reviews *
The threads of the book are stitched together well by the editors in a concluding chapter, which makes important the notion of action as well as thoughtful research. This is a truly heroic effort. * The British Journal of Sociology of Education *
Wayne Veck is Senior Lecturer in Education at Winchester University, UK, having started his teaching career as a teacher of English to students from Afghanistan and Iraq seeking refuge in the UK. Helen M. Gunter is Professor of Educational Policy at the University of Manchester, UK, and is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences.