The Reconceptualization of Curriculum Studies
A Festschrift in Honor of William F. Pinar
Herausgeber: Doll, Mary Aswell
The Reconceptualization of Curriculum Studies
A Festschrift in Honor of William F. Pinar
Herausgeber: Doll, Mary Aswell
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In this volume scholars from around the world consider the influential work of William F. Pinar from a variety of "conversations" his ideas have generated. The major focus is on the What, Why, and How of the word "reconceptualization" and on Pinar's argument for curriculum to return to its root in the word currere, emphasizing autobiography, study, and place.
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In this volume scholars from around the world consider the influential work of William F. Pinar from a variety of "conversations" his ideas have generated. The major focus is on the What, Why, and How of the word "reconceptualization" and on Pinar's argument for curriculum to return to its root in the word currere, emphasizing autobiography, study, and place.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 234
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Juli 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 454g
- ISBN-13: 9781138666146
- ISBN-10: 1138666149
- Artikelnr.: 45568515
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 234
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Juli 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 454g
- ISBN-13: 9781138666146
- ISBN-10: 1138666149
- Artikelnr.: 45568515
Mary Aswell Doll is Professor of English in the Liberal Arts Department at Savannah College of Art and Design, Savannah Georgia, USA.
1. Holding Tight against the Tide: The Problem of Instrumentalism Tero
Autio 2. Haunting Revelations: Teaching Amidst the Ruins of Race, Gender
and Violence Denise Taliaferro Baszile 3. Of that Visionary Gleam: On
"Sanity, Madness and the School" Alan A. Block 4. The Homoerotic Turn and
Currere Deborah P. Britzman 5. Crossing the Continental Divide: Pinar,
Reconceptualization and Curriculum in Canada Terrance R. Carson 6.
Curriculum as the Place of Study Brian Casemore 7. Excavating the Self: The
Archaeologies of Pinar and Hillman Mary Aswell Doll 8. Reflection on a Poor
Curriculum:With a Nod to Edgar Morin William E. Doll, Jr. 9. Two
Groundbreaking Ideas of William F. Pinar: Curriculum as Complicated
Conversation and Study as the Site of Education Peter P. Grimmett 10. The
Politics of Presence Madeleine R. Grumet 11.William F. Pinar: Reflections
on a Public Intellectual Petra Hendry 12.Maple Jazz: An Artist's Rendering
ofCurrere Rita L. Irwin 13. Generous Interrogations and Affirmations:
Histories and Trajectories Janet L. Miller 14. Disciplinarity and
Interdisciplinarity: William Pinar's Complicated Conversation with
Curriculum Studies Marla Morris 15. Becoming Inter-national: Autobiography,
Curriculum, and Hyph-e-nated Subjectivities Nicholas Ng-A-Fook 16. Pinar's
Influence on the Consolidation of Portuguese Curriculum Studies José
Augusto Pacheco 17. An Embodied Currere: Dance, Poetics, Place and
Site-Specific Performance Celeste Snowber 18. Layers of
Internationalization and Poststructuralism: William F. Pinar and Curriculum
Studies in Brazil Maria Luiza Süssekind 19. William Pinar's Contribution to
Our Understanding of Sex, Gender and Curriculum Peter M. Taubman 20.
Complexities of the Complicated Conversation Donna Trueit 21. The
Autobiographical, the National, and the International: A Complicated
Conversation Hongyu Wang 22. The Practice of Radical Love: Understanding
Curriculum as Queer Theological Text Rita Ugena Whitlock 23. William F.
Pinar's Contributions to the World Curriculum Field Zhang Hua
Autio 2. Haunting Revelations: Teaching Amidst the Ruins of Race, Gender
and Violence Denise Taliaferro Baszile 3. Of that Visionary Gleam: On
"Sanity, Madness and the School" Alan A. Block 4. The Homoerotic Turn and
Currere Deborah P. Britzman 5. Crossing the Continental Divide: Pinar,
Reconceptualization and Curriculum in Canada Terrance R. Carson 6.
Curriculum as the Place of Study Brian Casemore 7. Excavating the Self: The
Archaeologies of Pinar and Hillman Mary Aswell Doll 8. Reflection on a Poor
Curriculum:With a Nod to Edgar Morin William E. Doll, Jr. 9. Two
Groundbreaking Ideas of William F. Pinar: Curriculum as Complicated
Conversation and Study as the Site of Education Peter P. Grimmett 10. The
Politics of Presence Madeleine R. Grumet 11.William F. Pinar: Reflections
on a Public Intellectual Petra Hendry 12.Maple Jazz: An Artist's Rendering
ofCurrere Rita L. Irwin 13. Generous Interrogations and Affirmations:
Histories and Trajectories Janet L. Miller 14. Disciplinarity and
Interdisciplinarity: William Pinar's Complicated Conversation with
Curriculum Studies Marla Morris 15. Becoming Inter-national: Autobiography,
Curriculum, and Hyph-e-nated Subjectivities Nicholas Ng-A-Fook 16. Pinar's
Influence on the Consolidation of Portuguese Curriculum Studies José
Augusto Pacheco 17. An Embodied Currere: Dance, Poetics, Place and
Site-Specific Performance Celeste Snowber 18. Layers of
Internationalization and Poststructuralism: William F. Pinar and Curriculum
Studies in Brazil Maria Luiza Süssekind 19. William Pinar's Contribution to
Our Understanding of Sex, Gender and Curriculum Peter M. Taubman 20.
Complexities of the Complicated Conversation Donna Trueit 21. The
Autobiographical, the National, and the International: A Complicated
Conversation Hongyu Wang 22. The Practice of Radical Love: Understanding
Curriculum as Queer Theological Text Rita Ugena Whitlock 23. William F.
Pinar's Contributions to the World Curriculum Field Zhang Hua
1. Holding Tight against the Tide: The Problem of Instrumentalism Tero
Autio 2. Haunting Revelations: Teaching Amidst the Ruins of Race, Gender
and Violence Denise Taliaferro Baszile 3. Of that Visionary Gleam: On
"Sanity, Madness and the School" Alan A. Block 4. The Homoerotic Turn and
Currere Deborah P. Britzman 5. Crossing the Continental Divide: Pinar,
Reconceptualization and Curriculum in Canada Terrance R. Carson 6.
Curriculum as the Place of Study Brian Casemore 7. Excavating the Self: The
Archaeologies of Pinar and Hillman Mary Aswell Doll 8. Reflection on a Poor
Curriculum:With a Nod to Edgar Morin William E. Doll, Jr. 9. Two
Groundbreaking Ideas of William F. Pinar: Curriculum as Complicated
Conversation and Study as the Site of Education Peter P. Grimmett 10. The
Politics of Presence Madeleine R. Grumet 11.William F. Pinar: Reflections
on a Public Intellectual Petra Hendry 12.Maple Jazz: An Artist's Rendering
ofCurrere Rita L. Irwin 13. Generous Interrogations and Affirmations:
Histories and Trajectories Janet L. Miller 14. Disciplinarity and
Interdisciplinarity: William Pinar's Complicated Conversation with
Curriculum Studies Marla Morris 15. Becoming Inter-national: Autobiography,
Curriculum, and Hyph-e-nated Subjectivities Nicholas Ng-A-Fook 16. Pinar's
Influence on the Consolidation of Portuguese Curriculum Studies José
Augusto Pacheco 17. An Embodied Currere: Dance, Poetics, Place and
Site-Specific Performance Celeste Snowber 18. Layers of
Internationalization and Poststructuralism: William F. Pinar and Curriculum
Studies in Brazil Maria Luiza Süssekind 19. William Pinar's Contribution to
Our Understanding of Sex, Gender and Curriculum Peter M. Taubman 20.
Complexities of the Complicated Conversation Donna Trueit 21. The
Autobiographical, the National, and the International: A Complicated
Conversation Hongyu Wang 22. The Practice of Radical Love: Understanding
Curriculum as Queer Theological Text Rita Ugena Whitlock 23. William F.
Pinar's Contributions to the World Curriculum Field Zhang Hua
Autio 2. Haunting Revelations: Teaching Amidst the Ruins of Race, Gender
and Violence Denise Taliaferro Baszile 3. Of that Visionary Gleam: On
"Sanity, Madness and the School" Alan A. Block 4. The Homoerotic Turn and
Currere Deborah P. Britzman 5. Crossing the Continental Divide: Pinar,
Reconceptualization and Curriculum in Canada Terrance R. Carson 6.
Curriculum as the Place of Study Brian Casemore 7. Excavating the Self: The
Archaeologies of Pinar and Hillman Mary Aswell Doll 8. Reflection on a Poor
Curriculum:With a Nod to Edgar Morin William E. Doll, Jr. 9. Two
Groundbreaking Ideas of William F. Pinar: Curriculum as Complicated
Conversation and Study as the Site of Education Peter P. Grimmett 10. The
Politics of Presence Madeleine R. Grumet 11.William F. Pinar: Reflections
on a Public Intellectual Petra Hendry 12.Maple Jazz: An Artist's Rendering
ofCurrere Rita L. Irwin 13. Generous Interrogations and Affirmations:
Histories and Trajectories Janet L. Miller 14. Disciplinarity and
Interdisciplinarity: William Pinar's Complicated Conversation with
Curriculum Studies Marla Morris 15. Becoming Inter-national: Autobiography,
Curriculum, and Hyph-e-nated Subjectivities Nicholas Ng-A-Fook 16. Pinar's
Influence on the Consolidation of Portuguese Curriculum Studies José
Augusto Pacheco 17. An Embodied Currere: Dance, Poetics, Place and
Site-Specific Performance Celeste Snowber 18. Layers of
Internationalization and Poststructuralism: William F. Pinar and Curriculum
Studies in Brazil Maria Luiza Süssekind 19. William Pinar's Contribution to
Our Understanding of Sex, Gender and Curriculum Peter M. Taubman 20.
Complexities of the Complicated Conversation Donna Trueit 21. The
Autobiographical, the National, and the International: A Complicated
Conversation Hongyu Wang 22. The Practice of Radical Love: Understanding
Curriculum as Queer Theological Text Rita Ugena Whitlock 23. William F.
Pinar's Contributions to the World Curriculum Field Zhang Hua