The Authors: Erika Hasebe-Ludt is an associate professor of teacher
education in the Faculty of Education at The University of
Lethbridge. She teaches and researches in the areas of language and
literacy, and curriculum studies. In addition to various articles
in edited books and journals, she is the co-editor (with Wanda
Hurren) of Curriculum Intertext: Place/Language/Pedagogy. Together
with Cynthia Chambers, Carl Leggo and other researchers, she is
investigating life writing as one of the new literacies in Canadian
cosmopolitan schools.
Cynthia Chambers is a professor in the Faculty of Education at The
University of Lethbridge. She teaches and researches in curriculum
studies, language and literacy, and indigenous studies. Her essays,
memoir and stories have been published in edited collections and
various periodicals. As well as the research on life writing, she
works collaboratively with indigenous communities on literacies of
place, human relations and the material world.
Carl Leggo is a poet and professor in the Department of Language
and Literacy Education at the University of British Columbia. He
teaches courses in English education, writing, and narrative
inquiry. Carl Leggo’s poetry, fiction, and essays have been
published in many journals. He is the author of several books
including: Growing Up Perpendicular on the Side of a Hill, View
from My Mother’s House, Come-By-Chance, and Teaching to Wonder:
Responding to Poetry in the Secondary Classroom. Also, he is a
co-editor of Being with A/r/tography (with Stephanie Springgay,
Rita L. Irwin, and Peter Gouzouasis), and of Creative Expression,
Creative Education (with Robert Kelly).
«This is a work of stunning brilliance and immense beauty. It
should serve as a standard for the various genres of autobiography,
story, and life-writing. By providing scholarly contextualizations
of those fields while offering carefully crafted examples of
writing in action, the authors have revealed how a courageous
attending to the details of our lives deeply enriches our
understanding of life. By the end, I could only sit in silence,
full of wonder, strangely at peace. It was the feeling that
something really important had been accomplished that showed us the
world in a manner of rare depth.» (David Geoffrey Smith, Professor
of Education, University of Alberta)
«‘Life Writing and Literary Métissage as an Ethos for Our Times’ is
a pioneering text, one that offers the field of curriculum studies,
in particular, and the field of education, in general, an
innovative methodology as well as an impassioned and beautifully
drawn argument for both the doing and the teaching of
autobiographical and life writing studies that attend to their
potentials as both political and redemptive practices. … the
‘Braids’ of this text, as narrated, juxtaposed and interwoven, not
only describe ‘experiences’ of these three authors, but also become
means by which to interpret, to interrupt, to re-assemble, to
question anew those very experiences. In developing and performing
this creative strategy for weaving together socio-historical
conditions of difference as well as points of relation, cross- and
inter-sections, and action, Hasebe-Ludt, Chambers, and Leggo
challenge as well as inspire curriculum scholars not only to engage
in such autobiographical and life writing pedagogies and practices,
but also to research the effects of such writing and theorizing on
ourselves as teachers, researchers, and writers.» (Janet L. Miller,
Professor, Department of Arts and Humanities, Teachers College,
Columbia University)
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