(Re)Storying Human/Earth Relationships in Environmental Education: Becoming (Partially) Posthumanist

Author:   Kathryn Riley
Publisher:   Springer Verlag, Singapore
Edition:   1st ed. 2023
ISBN:  

9789819925865


Pages:   124
Publication Date:   22 June 2023
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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(Re)Storying Human/Earth Relationships in Environmental Education: Becoming (Partially) Posthumanist


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Overview

This book is situated in the simultaneous thinking (theory) and doing (action) of posthumanist performativity and new materialist methodologies to bring forth a multitude of stories that demonstrate co-constituted and co-implicated worldmaking practices. It is written in response to the fact that our Earth is at a critical juncture. As atmospheric temperatures rise and cast unprecedented and wide-spread social and ecological crises across the planet, social and ecological injustices and threats cannot be separated from globalising, neoliberal, capitalist, and colonial discourses that proliferate through anthropocentric and humancentric logics. Manifesting in binary classifications that position the human as separate from the Earth, and dominant categories of the human in hierarchies of power, such logics homogenise and institutionalise the field of environmental education and result in an over-emphasis on instrumentalist, technicist, and mechanistic teaching and learning practices. Exploring the affects emerging within, and between, an assemblage comprising Researcher/Teacher/Environmental Education Worldings, this book seeks to understand how the researcher makes sense of herself with/in the broader ecologies of the world; collaborative processes with an elementary-school teacher in Saskatchewan, Canada, as actualised through four co-created and co-implemented multisensory researcher/teacher enactments (Mindful Walking, Mapping Worlds, Eco-art Installation, and Photographic Encounters); and how the researcher/teacher organises themselves with Land-based pedagogies, environmental education curriculum policy, and wider discourses of Western education. This book does not propose a better way of teaching and learning in environmental education. Rather, showing how difference between categories is relationally bound, this book offers a conceptual (re)storying of human/Earth relationships in environmental education for social and ecologicaljustice in these times of the Anthropocene.  

Full Product Details

Author:   Kathryn Riley
Publisher:   Springer Verlag, Singapore
Imprint:   Springer Verlag, Singapore
Edition:   1st ed. 2023
Weight:   0.395kg
ISBN:  

9789819925865


ISBN 10:   981992586
Pages:   124
Publication Date:   22 June 2023
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

CHAPTER ONE: OPENING TO POSTHUMANIST POSSIBILITIES FOR ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATIONCHAPTER TWO: ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION IN THE ANTHROPOCENE CHAPTER THREE: NEW MATERIALISM: SENSE-MAKING WITH/THROUGH MATERIAL/DISCURSIVE ENTANGLEMENTS CHAPTER FOUR: LADY/BACKPACKER STORYTELLING CHAPTER FIVE: RESEARCHER/TEACHER RELATIONSHIPS WITH LAND AND PEDAGOGY CHAPTER SIX: NEGOTIATING A LIVED CURRICULUM CHAPTER SEVEN: AGENTIAL WORLDS OUTSIDE THE CLASSROOM CHAPTER EIGHT: BECOMING (PARTIALLY) POSTHUMANIST

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Author Information

Kathryn Riley (she/her/hers) is an Assistant Professor in Physical Education/movement, Health Education/wellbeing, and Outdoor and Placed-based Education in the Faculty of Education at the University of Manitoba. Kathryn completed a B.A. in Education and a B.A. in Sport and Outdoor Recreation at Monash University in 2007. She then completed her Masters research through Deakin University in 2014. In 2019, Kathryn obtained a Ph.D. through Deakin University, conducting her research within the Saskatchewan-based education system to explore different ways of (re)storying human/Earth relationships for/with/in these Anthropocene times. Kathryn’s current research is focused on an anticolonial praxis in education, and posthumanist and new materialist scholarship that examines material (matter) and discursive (social) entanglements for a sense of belonging with Land/Country/Place.

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