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OverviewEducational Theory and Jewish Studies in Conversation: From Volozhin to Buczacz, by Harvey Shapiro, PhD, brings together two different fields of study—modern Jewish studies and contemporary educational theory—to provide new theoretical frameworks for their interaction. Although Jewish studies and education programs at secular universities have joined denominational and transdenominational institutions of higher learning in adopting a dual or parallel course structure, there has been little scholarly attention given to the basis for doing so. Shapiro provides alternative theoretical frameworks for the relationship between Jewish studies and educational theory and discusses different ways of developing and articulating these relationships between disciplines. Shapiro shows what is at stake when students and faculty think and communicate together across discourses—in particular, between the fields of education and Jewish studies. Presenting an alternative to conventional notions of interdisciplinarity, this book’s import extends to virtually all relationships between the humanities and professional education when these different discourses illuminate and challenge one another. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Harvey ShapiroPublisher: Lexington Books Imprint: Lexington Books Dimensions: Width: 15.90cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 23.60cm Weight: 0.413kg ISBN: 9780739175316ISBN 10: 0739175319 Pages: 186 Publication Date: 06 December 2012 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsPart One: Introducing the Discourses Chapter One: Engaging the Discourses Chapter Two: Differentiating and Deepening the Relationships: John Dewey, Justus Buchler, and Michael Oakeshott Part Two: Educational Theory Meets Volozhin Chapter Three: R. Hayyim of Volozhin, John Dewey, and Martha Nussbaum: An Educational Query Chapter Four: Ends vs. The End : Rabbi Hayyim of Volozhin's Non-Messianic Vision Chapter Five: Walking and Talking Together: John Dewey and R. Hayyim on Means, Ends, and the Ideal Part Three: Agnon's Narratives: An Ethics of Alterity in Reading and Teaching Chapter Six: Multivocal Narrative and the Teacher as Narrator: Agnon's Two Scholars Who Were In Our Town. ( Shnei talmidei hakhamim she-hayu be-`ireinu ) Chapter Seven: The Student as Outcast: Double-voice in S. Y. Agnon's Hanidah Afterword: The Legacy of Conversation: Continuing . . . Bibliography Index About the AuthorReviewsHarvey Shapiro's book is an absolute first among writers of Jewish interest, and among the first in the world of educational thinking in general. In the tradition of Jerome Bruner, who joined narrative theory, psychology and philosophy to change our way of understanding learning, Shapiro takes two fields which most people read separately, (education and literary theory), and illuminates both fields through his unique energy and wide ranging intellect. The author has been working on narrative for many years, and I have looked forward to this level of thinking from him for a long time. And here it is! -- William Cutter, Hebrew Union College Harvey Shapiro has crafted an erudite conversation between educational theory and Jewish studies following the pioneering philosopher of Jewish education Michael Rosenak. The original conception of interdiscursivity that emerges promises to transform the relation between these two fields by putting them on a more equal intellectual footing. Of great interest to scholars of religion and religious education. A must for anyone concerned with the burgeoning field of Jewish educational research, the future of Jewish studies, or the transmission of Judaism across the generations. -- Hanan Alexander, University of Haifa Shapiro's learned and philosophically rich treatise makes a compelling case for mutually illuminating points of connection among educational theory, political philosophy, and classical Jewish learning. In creating these encounters, Shapiro exemplifies the value of what he calls interdiscursivity, showing the benefits of educational theory for Jewish Studies and vice versa, the ways that Jewish thought can enhance contemporary educational philosophy and theory. Yeshivah scholar Reb Hayyim of Volozhin and pragmatist philosopher John Dewey or Mikhail Bakhtin's concept of heteroglossia and the fictional machinations of Nobel laureate S.Y. Agnon create new thought collages of surprising interest and beauty. -- Lori Lefkovitz, Northeastern University Harvey Shapiro's book is an absolute first among writers of Jewish interest, and among the first in the world of educational thinking in general. In the tradition of Jerome Bruner, who joined narrative theory, psychology and philosophy to change our way of understanding learning, Shapiro takes two fields which most people read separately, (education and literary theory), and illuminates both fields through his unique energy and wide ranging intellect. The author has been working on narrative for many years, and I have looked forward to this level of thinking from him for a long time. And here it is! -- William Cutter, Hebrew Union College Harvey Shapiro has crafted an erudite conversation between educational theory and Jewish studies following the pioneering philosopher of Jewish education Michael Rosenak. The original conception of interdiscursivity that emerges promises to transform the relation between these two fields by putting them on a more equal intellectual footing. Of great interest to scholars of religion and religious education. A must for anyone concerned with the burgeoning field of Jewish educational research, the future of Jewish studies, or the transmission of Judaism across the generations. -- Hanan Alexander, University of Haifa Shapiro's learned and philosophically rich treatise makes a compelling case for mutually illuminating points of connection among educational theory, political philosophy, and classical Jewish learning. In creating these encounters, Shapiro exemplifies the value of what he calls interdiscursivity, showing the benefits of educational theory for Jewish Studies and vice versa, the ways that Jewish thought can enhance contemporary educational philosophy and theory. Yeshivah scholar Reb Hayyim of Volozhin and pragmatist philosopher John Dewey or Mikhail Bakhtin's concept of heteroglossia and the fictional machinations of Nobel laureate S.Y. Agnon create new thought collages of surprising interest and beauty. -- Lori Lefkovitz, Northeastern University "Harvey Shapiro's book is an absolute ""first"" among writers of Jewish interest, and among the first in the world of educational thinking in general. In the tradition of Jerome Bruner, who joined narrative theory, psychology and philosophy to change our way of understanding learning, Shapiro takes two fields which most people read separately, (education and literary theory), and illuminates both fields through his unique energy and wide ranging intellect. The author has been working on narrative for many years, and I have looked forward to this level of thinking from him for a long time. And here it is! -- William Cutter, Hebrew Union College Harvey Shapiro has crafted an erudite conversation between educational theory and Jewish studies following the pioneering philosopher of Jewish education Michael Rosenak. The original conception of interdiscursivity that emerges promises to transform the relation between these two fields by putting them on a more equal intellectual footing. Of great interest to scholars of religion and religious education. A must for anyone concerned with the burgeoning field of Jewish educational research, the future of Jewish studies, or the transmission of Judaism across the generations. -- Hanan Alexander, University of Haifa Shapiro’s learned and philosophically rich treatise makes a compelling case for mutually illuminating points of connection among educational theory, political philosophy, and classical Jewish learning. In creating these encounters, Shapiro exemplifies the value of what he calls “interdiscursivity,” showing the benefits of educational theory for Jewish Studies and vice versa, the ways that Jewish thought can enhance contemporary educational philosophy and theory. Yeshivah scholar Reb Hayyim of Volozhin and pragmatist philosopher John Dewey or Mikhail Bakhtin’s concept of heteroglossia and the fictional machinations of Nobel laureate S.Y. Agnon create new thought collages of surprising interest and beauty. -- Lori Lefkovitz, Northeastern University" Author InformationHarvey Shapiro, Ph.D is Associate Professor of Education at Northeastern University in Boston. He earned his Ph.D. in Jewish Education from Hebrew Union College. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |