In curriculum studies, we pay critical attention to violence in various forms; why not to nonviolence? This original and inspirational book foregrounds nonviolence as a positive force in education through multidimensional, complex, and interdisciplinary lenses. Starlight for shifting relational dynamics in a time of darkness and crises to co-create mutual-flourishing pathways, nonviolence not only has an inherent capacity to treat the roots of violence but is also built on a deeply shared sense of interconnectedness that fosters individual and communal integration. "Nonviolence or nonexistence" is an urgent call.
This book (with writings that span a decade) conceptualizes nonviolence education through multilayered, evolving, and cross-disciplinary perspectives, centering on nonviolent relationality that engages with differences within the self and with the other (including the non-human other) to bridge inner work and outer work, transcend dualism and divisions, and transform pedagogy and curriculum dynamics. Drawing upon international and indigenous wisdom, Gandhi-King philosophies of nonviolent social change, theories of the human psyche and currere, post-structural theories, and feminism, this book explicates nonviolence as curriculum and educational renewal in an ongoing process, infused by attuned, improvised, creative, and integrative energy that holds tensions, cultivates compassion, and inspires awakenings.
Scholars, students, and practitioners in the fields of curriculum studies, nonviolence studies, peace education, teaching and learning, educational foundations, philosophy of education, international education, East/West inquiry, and community based education will welcome this book.
This book (with writings that span a decade) conceptualizes nonviolence education through multilayered, evolving, and cross-disciplinary perspectives, centering on nonviolent relationality that engages with differences within the self and with the other (including the non-human other) to bridge inner work and outer work, transcend dualism and divisions, and transform pedagogy and curriculum dynamics. Drawing upon international and indigenous wisdom, Gandhi-King philosophies of nonviolent social change, theories of the human psyche and currere, post-structural theories, and feminism, this book explicates nonviolence as curriculum and educational renewal in an ongoing process, infused by attuned, improvised, creative, and integrative energy that holds tensions, cultivates compassion, and inspires awakenings.
Scholars, students, and practitioners in the fields of curriculum studies, nonviolence studies, peace education, teaching and learning, educational foundations, philosophy of education, international education, East/West inquiry, and community based education will welcome this book.
'Starlight is everywhere', Hongyu Wang exclaims-That starlight is nonviolence, lighting the way in dark times; but we must awaken to it, as the call of this moment, and as a call that is educational. Advancing nonviolence as an everyday practice of education, rooted in a sense of our interconnectedness, she proposes a positive force for the cultivation of flourishing personhood and planet, a promising response to the challenges of division and difference, and a transformational path for creatively restoring and sustaining human happiness and community. She invites us, as well, to imbue our understandings of curriculum as lived with such energy and intention, by which violence and its normalization may not only be denounced, and systems of domination and dualism deconstructed, but also dynamic, nonviolent relationality nurtured within and among us respecting self, others, and the world. A truly beautiful and phenomenal achievement, this seminal and systematic treatment of nonviolence in education and curriculum studies is at once: intellectually productive-illumining the limitations of as well as lines of affiliation with current literature in the field advancing democracy, equity and social justice; theoretically sophisticated-deftly integrating international/indigenous wisdom traditions, nonviolence and peace studies & movements, as well as diverse theoretical perspectives (e.g., critical, poststructural, psychoanalytic, feminist); and emotionally stirring-infused with the experiential insight and autobiographical heart of this foremost scholar on the subject. If King reminds us that the arc of the moral universe bends toward justice, Hongyu Wang convinces us that it bends toward nonviolence too. Molly Quinn, PhD St. Bernard Chapter of the LSU Alumni Association Endowed Professor Director, LSU Curriculum Theory Project Louisiana State University