Curriculum as Confession: The Promise of Teaching for Selfhood and Truth
This book offers a philosophical inquiry into the idea of curriculum as confession and considers how it can help us answer questions of justice, selfhood, and truth. It connects the field of curriculum studies and continental philosophy in order to arrive at new ways of thinking through the concept and act of confession. Utilising a phenomenological and deconstructive approach to thinking about curriculum, the author draws upon scholars including William Pinar, Jacques Derrida, Madeleine Grumet, and Michel Foucault to act as interlocutors for a re-thinking of Pinar’s statement that “we need educational confession.” The chapters argue that confession communicates the interplay between thinking, translation, and transformation, showing how confession can be conceived of as educative in both instrumental and existential ways. An innovative study that explores confession in both “religious” and “secular” senses, and conceptualises curriculum as a theological and phenomenological text, it uniquely explores what confession can reveal, how we tell the truth without violating the other, and how one does justice to the world they experience. It will appeal to scholarly audiences with interests in curriculum studies, teacher education, philosophy of education, religious studies, religious education, and theology.

1145661587
Curriculum as Confession: The Promise of Teaching for Selfhood and Truth
This book offers a philosophical inquiry into the idea of curriculum as confession and considers how it can help us answer questions of justice, selfhood, and truth. It connects the field of curriculum studies and continental philosophy in order to arrive at new ways of thinking through the concept and act of confession. Utilising a phenomenological and deconstructive approach to thinking about curriculum, the author draws upon scholars including William Pinar, Jacques Derrida, Madeleine Grumet, and Michel Foucault to act as interlocutors for a re-thinking of Pinar’s statement that “we need educational confession.” The chapters argue that confession communicates the interplay between thinking, translation, and transformation, showing how confession can be conceived of as educative in both instrumental and existential ways. An innovative study that explores confession in both “religious” and “secular” senses, and conceptualises curriculum as a theological and phenomenological text, it uniquely explores what confession can reveal, how we tell the truth without violating the other, and how one does justice to the world they experience. It will appeal to scholarly audiences with interests in curriculum studies, teacher education, philosophy of education, religious studies, religious education, and theology.

180.0 Pre Order
Curriculum as Confession: The Promise of Teaching for Selfhood and Truth

Curriculum as Confession: The Promise of Teaching for Selfhood and Truth

by Christopher M. Cruz
Curriculum as Confession: The Promise of Teaching for Selfhood and Truth

Curriculum as Confession: The Promise of Teaching for Selfhood and Truth

by Christopher M. Cruz

Hardcover

$180.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
    Available for Pre-Order. This item will be released on October 21, 2024

Related collections and offers


Overview

This book offers a philosophical inquiry into the idea of curriculum as confession and considers how it can help us answer questions of justice, selfhood, and truth. It connects the field of curriculum studies and continental philosophy in order to arrive at new ways of thinking through the concept and act of confession. Utilising a phenomenological and deconstructive approach to thinking about curriculum, the author draws upon scholars including William Pinar, Jacques Derrida, Madeleine Grumet, and Michel Foucault to act as interlocutors for a re-thinking of Pinar’s statement that “we need educational confession.” The chapters argue that confession communicates the interplay between thinking, translation, and transformation, showing how confession can be conceived of as educative in both instrumental and existential ways. An innovative study that explores confession in both “religious” and “secular” senses, and conceptualises curriculum as a theological and phenomenological text, it uniquely explores what confession can reveal, how we tell the truth without violating the other, and how one does justice to the world they experience. It will appeal to scholarly audiences with interests in curriculum studies, teacher education, philosophy of education, religious studies, religious education, and theology.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781032586649
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 10/21/2024
Series: Studies in Curriculum Theory Series
Pages: 172
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Christopher M. Cruz is an English teacher at The Paideia School and an independent scholar in the field of curriculum studies, USA.

Table of Contents

1. Curriculum Theorizing as a Confessional Event 2. Phenomenology, Deconstruction, and Curriculum Studies 3. The Violence of (Curricular) Conceptualization 4. “A Confessing Animal”: Governmentality, Subjectivity, and Truth-Telling 5. There Is Always Someone Else: (Cir)Confession and the Call of Curriculum 6. Praise and the Opening of Curriculum

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews