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Thinking Again: Education After Postmodernism

(Hardback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

Thinking Again: Education After Postmodernism

Contributors:

By (Author) Nigel P. Blake
By (author) Paul Smeyers
By (author) Richard Smith
By (author) Paul Standish

ISBN:

9780897895118

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

30th April 1998

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

370.1

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

224

Description

The 'postmodern condition,' in which instrumentalism usurps all other considerations, has produced a kind of intellectual paralysis in the world of education. It is difficult to take issue with such shibboleths of our time as 'standards', 'effectiveness' or 'quality', or the transmission of a nation's 'heritage', yet many people sense that important values are being lost as the education systems of the developed world increasingly devote themselves to managerialism and 'performativity', the quest for efficiency and effectiveness that can be quantified. This book shows how a sustained and telling critique of current educational policy and practice can be developed from the writings of such postmodern thinkers as Lyotard, Derrida, Foucault, and Lacan. These thinkers show us new directions, making what has become over-familiar in education seem strange, and they shake us out of established ways of thinking and writing. The book reveals how very different certain aspects of educationfor instance, literacy, moral education (in the home as well as the school), curriculum policy and planninglook in the light of these ideas. The book makes many of the central ideas of postmodern theory accessible by demonstrating their relevance to familiar aspects of the practice of education.

Reviews

"[A] thoroughly engrossing book that scholars and teachers will profit from reading, including those -- perhaps especially those -- who have regarded postmoderism with disdain and incomprehension."-Eamonn Callan, Professor of Educational Policy Studies University of Alberta
"Rereading philosophical and literary sources in a perceptive and engaging style, the authors offer sharp critical insights while also broadening our sense of educational possibilities."-Nicholas Burbules, Professor of Educational Policy Studies University of Illinois, Urbana/Champaign
"What I find most interesting is that the authors treat their main chosen poststructuralists as continuing and contributing to [the] traditional Anglo-American philosophy of education in a non-relativistic manner, rather than opposing it, which many Nietzschean based interpretations of these poststructuralists might suggest. This makes the book an important contribution to [the] philosophy of education in itself."-Jim Marshall, Professor of Education and Dean of the Faculty of Arts University of Auckland
[T]he whole text with its rich, readable, rhetorical mix of exposition, argument, jokes, and ironies.-British Journal of Educational Studies
Full of philosphical, spiritual, metaphysical and Shakespearean references, this book is for the serious student of educational theory and philosophy. It is of equal interest to the serious reader of sociological and historical studies.-Education Libraries
I cannot not repeat how much I enjoyed reading the book myself; how refreshing I found the experience. It seems to me that in writing it Blake, et al. have done an important service in focusing a newly emergent strand within the circles of British philosophy of education....should generate a new enthusiasn for a long overdue debate on the future of philosophy in education.-Journal of Philosophy of Education
This book effectively overturns the caricature that postmodern thought is inheretly relativistic and nihilistic and develops a theoretical vision at once humanistic and theological....Thinking Again can serve as an introduction to postmodern thinking for those unfamiliar with it...a resource for thinking together about the renewal of educational theory and practice for those in the fields of religion and theological education.-Blackwell Publishers Ltd
This sharply written book, edited by Blake, argues that a discerible postmodern perspective, most generally associated with Derrida, Foucault, Lacan, and Lyotard, remains relevant to the examination of contemporary educational matters...They are particularly trenchant in articulating the theoretical legacy of critiques on structuralism and foundationalism...It is difficult to imagine a more lucid analysis, and this collaborative effort may well serve as a primer for advanced undergraduate students looking to venture into this terrain....Highly recommended for upper-division undergraduate and graduate students in philosophy of education courses.-Choice
Those who doubt that contemporary educational writing can go beyond evaluation and the management of assessment can think again....The authors succeed in shifting the reader's thinking from concern with "performativity" to contemplating philosophical problems in education. This book "does not save the reader time" but invites one to think in new directions about education and promises--which takes time. Thinking Again is not prescriptive and offers no simple solutions. Recommended.-Education Libraries
"The whole text with its rich, readable, rhetorical mix of exposition, argument, jokes, and ironies."-British Journal of Educational Studies
"[T]he whole text with its rich, readable, rhetorical mix of exposition, argument, jokes, and ironies."-British Journal of Educational Studies
"Full of philosphical, spiritual, metaphysical and Shakespearean references, this book is for the serious student of educational theory and philosophy. It is of equal interest to the serious reader of sociological and historical studies."-Education Libraries
"I cannot not repeat how much I enjoyed reading the book myself; how refreshing I found the experience. It seems to me that in writing it Blake, et al. have done an important service in focusing a newly emergent strand within the circles of British philosophy of education....should generate a new enthusiasn for a long overdue debate on the future of philosophy in education."-Journal of Philosophy of Education
"This book effectively overturns the caricature that postmodern thought is inheretly relativistic and nihilistic and develops a theoretical vision at once humanistic and theological....Thinking Again can serve as an introduction to postmodern thinking for those unfamiliar with it...a resource for thinking together about the renewal of educational theory and practice for those in the fields of religion and theological education."-Blackwell Publishers Ltd
"Those who doubt that contemporary educational writing can go beyond evaluation and the management of assessment can think again....The authors succeed in shifting the reader's thinking from concern with "performativity" to contemplating philosophical problems in education. This book "does not save the reader time" but invites one to think in new directions about education and promises--which takes time. Thinking Again is not prescriptive and offers no simple solutions. Recommended."-Education Libraries
"This sharply written book, edited by Blake, argues that a discerible postmodern perspective, most generally associated with Derrida, Foucault, Lacan, and Lyotard, remains relevant to the examination of contemporary educational matters...They are particularly trenchant in articulating the theoretical legacy of critiques on structuralism and foundationalism...It is difficult to imagine a more lucid analysis, and this collaborative effort may well serve as a primer for advanced undergraduate students looking to venture into this terrain....Highly recommended for upper-division undergraduate and graduate students in philosophy of education courses."-Choice

Author Bio

NIGEL BLAKE is Lecturer in Educational Technology at The Open University, England. PAUL SMEYERS is Professor, Department of Educational Sciences, at the University of Leuven, Belgium. RICHARD SMITH is Senior Lecturer, School of Education, at the University of Durham, England, and is editor of the Journal of Philosophy of Education. PAUL STANDISH is Lecturer in Education at the University of Dundee, Scotland.

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