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Existential philosophy and the promise of education : learning from myths and metaphors / Mordechai Gordon.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : Peter Lang, [2016]Copyright date: ©2016Description: vii, 164 pages ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1433130335
  • 9781433130335
  • 1433130327
  • 9781433130328
Other title:
  • Learning from myths and metaphors
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 370.1 23
LOC classification:
  • LB14.7 .G657 2016
Contents:
Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Part I: -- 1. Teachers as Absurd Heroes : Camus' Sisyphus and the Promise of Rebellion -- 2. Education as Empowerment : Exploring Dostoyevsky's Notion of "the Underground" -- 3. Kafka's The Metamorphosis and the Challenge of Relating to Strangers -- 4. Negotiating Contingency : Sartre's Nausea and the Possibility of Losing Control in a Technological World -- Part II: -- 5. Nietzsche on the Significance of Learning about the Past -- 6. Martin Buber's Metaphor of "Starting from Above" and the Issue of Educational Authority -- 7. Hannah Arendt's Concept of the "Banality of Evil" : On Thoughtlessness in Education -- 8. Maxine Greene, Opening Spaces and Education for Freedom.
Summary: "Myths and metaphors share not only an ability to call our attention to aspects of our world of which we were previously unaware, but also a propensity toward symbolic meanings and interpretations. In Existential Philosophy and the Promise of Education: Learning from Myths and Metaphors, Professor Gordon draws on some well-known myths and metaphors of various Existentialist thinkers and writers as a lens and an interpretative framework with which to explore a variety of issues in philosophy of education. His book argues that symbolic or metaphorical interpretations can offer us representations of problems in education that go beyond what we can gain when we consider them only in their literal sense. Existential Philosophy and the Promise of Education is an excellent classroom text for a variety of foundations courses, including the Philosophy of Education." --Publisher's website.
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Includes bibliographical references.

Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Part I: -- 1. Teachers as Absurd Heroes : Camus' Sisyphus and the Promise of Rebellion -- 2. Education as Empowerment : Exploring Dostoyevsky's Notion of "the Underground" -- 3. Kafka's The Metamorphosis and the Challenge of Relating to Strangers -- 4. Negotiating Contingency : Sartre's Nausea and the Possibility of Losing Control in a Technological World -- Part II: -- 5. Nietzsche on the Significance of Learning about the Past -- 6. Martin Buber's Metaphor of "Starting from Above" and the Issue of Educational Authority -- 7. Hannah Arendt's Concept of the "Banality of Evil" : On Thoughtlessness in Education -- 8. Maxine Greene, Opening Spaces and Education for Freedom.

"Myths and metaphors share not only an ability to call our attention to aspects of our world of which we were previously unaware, but also a propensity toward symbolic meanings and interpretations. In Existential Philosophy and the Promise of Education: Learning from Myths and Metaphors, Professor Gordon draws on some well-known myths and metaphors of various Existentialist thinkers and writers as a lens and an interpretative framework with which to explore a variety of issues in philosophy of education. His book argues that symbolic or metaphorical interpretations can offer us representations of problems in education that go beyond what we can gain when we consider them only in their literal sense. Existential Philosophy and the Promise of Education is an excellent classroom text for a variety of foundations courses, including the Philosophy of Education." --Publisher's website.

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