Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Chinas Education, Curriculum Knowledge and Cultural Inscriptions: Dancing with The Wind [Kõva köide]

(Hangzhou Normal University, China)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 190 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 430 g, 2 Tables, black and white; 2 Line drawings, black and white; 4 Halftones, black and white; 6 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Routledge Cultural Studies in Knowledge, Curriculum, and Education
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Jun-2018
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0415787548
  • ISBN-13: 9780415787543
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 190 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 430 g, 2 Tables, black and white; 2 Line drawings, black and white; 4 Halftones, black and white; 6 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Routledge Cultural Studies in Knowledge, Curriculum, and Education
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Jun-2018
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0415787548
  • ISBN-13: 9780415787543
Teised raamatud teemal:
With a focus on the role of discourse and language in education, this book examines Chinas educational reform from an original perspective that avoids mapping on Westernized educational sensibilities to a Chinese environment. Zhao untangles the tradition-modernity division expressed in Chinas educational language about the body and teacher-student difference. Exploring the historical and cultural implications of the ways Chinas schooling is talked about and acted upon, Zhao argues that Chinese notion "wind" (feng) is a defining aspect of Chinese teaching and learning. Incorporating Western and Chinese literature, this book explores the language of education, curriculum, and knowledge on a cross-cultural landscape and as cultural inscriptions.

Arvustused

Dancing with The Wind is a far-sighted effort to transgress the dominant western epistemic lens through which the Chinese educational project is being constructed in research work. Without reverting to comfortable or essentialist narratives of the Chinese other, it locates educational reform in that country within a global space but delicately draws out the ways in which it is the embodiment of difference, using that to historicize the curriculum and schooling but in ways that disrupt our attempts to settle upon comfortable portraits and problematics. Written with humility and grace, it is an invitation to unlearn, and thus a powerful corrective to contemporary comparative research on China.

-- Stephen Carney, Associate Professor in Comparative Education, Roskilde University, Denmark

Zhaos "Dancing with 'The Wind'" provides an important and intellectually creative contribution to the fields of curriculum, comparative and educational studies. The text provides a unique, novel and intellectually challenging approach for culturally and historically understanding the assumptions and implications of schooling. The analyses of the Chinese character of "wind is combined with other Chinese characters to bring into focus a cultural and linguistic terrain of the educational body that engages yet disengages Westernized modes of thought and the construction of difference. The book makes possible a way of thinking about the theoretical difficulties of comparison and offers a style of study for understanding difference. Its style engages in the self and other without the diminishing of either.

-- Professor Thomas Popkewitz, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA

"This is an erudite, elegant and sophisticated analysis of more-than-China and more-than-the-West. Contesting education, curriculum, knowledge, history, and being, Z

List of Figures and Tables
ix
Series Foreword x
Foreword xiv
Thomas S. Popkewitz
Preface xix
Acknowledgments xxx
Permissions to Reprint xxxi
Author Note xxxii
Introduction: Encountering the Chinese "Wind" and "Body" Aporia as a Starting Point 1(22)
PART I Overcoming "Epistemicide" in Cross-cultural Educational Studies
23(74)
1 "Epistemicide" as an Effect of Comparative Paradigms and Globalized Discourses
25(26)
2 An Archaeological-Historical Mode of Inquiry
51(22)
3 An Ontological Language--Discourse Perspective
73(24)
PART II Paradigmatic Unpackings of China's Language, Knowledge, and Education
97(72)
4 Beyond Representation: Yijing Thought and Confucius' Wind-Pedagogy
99(23)
5 Beyond Conceptual Thinking: Chinese Body-Thinking and Educational Body
122(27)
6 Beyond Identity vs. Difference Division: A Daoist Teacher--Student (Re)Ordering
149(20)
PART III Revisiting My Research-Learning Journey as a Post-foundational Case Study
169(18)
7 Daoist Onto-un-learning Way and Post-foundational Study
171(16)
Index 187
Weili Zhao obtained her Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA in 2015 and is currently an Assistant Professor in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. With intellectual training in both discourse analysis and curriculum studies, she is interested in unpacking Chinas current educational thinking and practices at the nexus, and as the (dis)assemblage, of tradition and modernity, East and West. Specifically, her research explicates the historical-cultural-philosophical insights of Chinese knowledge, curriculum, and educational thinking to hopefully dialogue with, for mutual informing and clarifications, the latest intellectual turns (say, the linguistic, body, cultural, study, affect turns) in the Western scholarship.