Like Letters in Running Water: A Mythopoetics of Curriculum

Author:   Mary Aswell Doll
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Inc
ISBN:  

9780805829846


Pages:   270
Publication Date:   01 July 2000
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Like Letters in Running Water: A Mythopoetics of Curriculum


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Overview

"Like Letters in Running Water explores ways in which fiction (prose, drama, poetry, myth, fairytale) yields transformative insights for educational theory and practice. Through a series of intensely original, powerful essays drawing on curriculum theory, literary analysis, psychology, and feminist theory and practice, Doll seeks to confront a commonly held bias that reading literary fictions is ""mere"" entertainment (not a learning experience). She suggests that fiction has immense teaching power because it connects readers with their alliances within themselves and this connection attends to social, outer issues addressed by traditional pedagogies with greater, deeper awareness. Her elaboration in this book of the concept of currere--the lived experience of curriculum--through literature, drama, and myth is a major contribution to the field of curriculum theory."

Full Product Details

Author:   Mary Aswell Doll
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Inc
Imprint:   Routledge
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.566kg
ISBN:  

9780805829846


ISBN 10:   0805829849
Pages:   270
Publication Date:   01 July 2000
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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.

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Reviews

In my opinion Mary Doll is reading and cleverly interpreting some of the most exciting writers in the fields of curriculum theory, literacy criticism, and psychology/psychoanalysis. Her application of these theorists and writers is uniquely hers, and it is refreshing and insightful....While I know of others in curriculum whose work draws heavily from literature...I have seen nothing that combines those fields in the very personal and mythopoetic way that Dr. Doll does....What distinguishes her work is the explicit and integral blending of the stories from literature with the stories from teaching. Each is essential to the other, a way of being and living rather than a tool for describing....I loved this book....This writing is luscious, palpable, edible, audible, and imminently useful. Reader, prepare to change your life. -Susan H. Edgerton Western Michigan University This book is fascinating. It is gently unruly as Doll weaves together myth and other fictions, curriculum, pedagogy, spirituality, and autobiography. Somehow it works, but it is not with tidy conclusions, which, I believe, is just the point. Her scholarship is an eclectic, interdisciplinary blend of really fine literature (that is inclusive across history, culture, genre, race...), criticism, and curriculum theorizing. It pushes readers into new directions, new ways of thinking about the intersections of the above....I can think of no other writers whose way of thinking about these issues matches Doll's creative intelligence and really superb writing....who take readers on the path Doll proposes....who combines what she does in terms of domains of knowing, or who uses the same method of taking readers through memory, dream, and culture, at the same time attempting to connect readers back and down into their own depth. -Delese Wear NEOUCOM Penetrating and insightful....One of the most original pieces of writing in the field of curriculum that I have read in years; I read it in one sitting never once putting it down....[Doll] makes a major contrilbution to our understanding of pedagogy as she redefines the work of the 'curricularist' as one who must 'tap the current within'....Her 'forefronting of fiction's metaphors as ways of seeing educational ideas' allows her to transform the ways we think and experience literature and to unfold new truths about how we might envision and practice teaching....The work is consumately crafted, full of feeling, and intensely personal-- Doll plays effortlessly as storyteller, poet, writing teacher, and social commentator rolled into one. In an outspoken, witty, provocative, and earthy autobiographical voice, she captures her passion, wisdom, and experience and reveals her intimate thoughts about childhood, mothers and daughters, dreams, patriarchy, loyalty, repression, guilt, commitment, and betrayal. This is a book for feminists to take delight in. It is also a crucial book for curriculum theorists, teacher educators, teachers, and graduate students -Ann V. Dean State University of New York, College at New Paltz


In my opinion Mary Doll is reading and cleverly interpreting some of the most exciting writers in the fields of curriculum theory, literacy criticism, and psychology/psychoanalysis. Her application of these theorists and writers is uniquely hers, and it is refreshing and insightful....While I know of others in curriculum whose work draws heavily from literature...I have seen nothing that combines those fields in the very personal and mythopoetic way that Dr. Doll does....What distinguishes her work is the explicit and integral blending of the stories from literature with the stories from teaching. Each is essential to the other, a way of being and living rather than a tool for describing....I loved this book....This writing is luscious, palpable, edible, audible, and imminently useful. Reader, prepare to change your life. -Susan H. Edgerton Western Michigan University This book is fascinating. It is gently unruly as Doll weaves together myth and other fictions, curriculum, pedagogy, spirituality, and autobiography. Somehow it works, but it is not with tidy conclusions, which, I believe, is just the point. Her scholarship is an eclectic, interdisciplinary blend of really fine literature (that is inclusive across history, culture, genre, race...), criticism, and curriculum theorizing. It pushes readers into new directions, new ways of thinking about the intersections of the above....I can think of no other writers whose way of thinking about these issues matches Doll's creative intelligence and really superb writing....who take readers on the path Doll proposes....who combines what she does in terms of domains of knowing, or who uses the same method of taking readers through memory, dream, and culture, at the same time attempting to connect readers back and down into their own depth. -Delese Wear NEOUCOM Penetrating and insightful....One of the most original pieces of writing in the field of curriculum that I have read in years; I read it in one sitting never once putting it down....[Doll] makes a major contrilbution to our understanding of pedagogy as she redefines the work of the 'curricularist' as one who must 'tap the current within'....Her 'forefronting of fiction's metaphors as ways of seeing educational ideas' allows her to transform the ways we think and experience literature and to unfold new truths about how we might envision and practice teaching....The work is consumately crafted, full of feeling, and intensely personal-- Doll plays effortlessly as storyteller, poet, writing teacher, and social commentator rolled into one. In an outspoken, witty, provocative, and earthy autobiographical voice, she captures her passion, wisdom, and experience and reveals her intimate thoughts about childhood, mothers and daughters, dreams, patriarchy, loyalty, repression, guilt, commitment, and betrayal. This is a book for feminists to take delight in. It is also a crucial book for curriculum theorists, teacher educators, teachers, and graduate students -Ann V. Dean State University of New York, College at New Paltz


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Mary Aswell Doll

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