CONTENTS
Foreword, William Ayers
Preface
Acknowledgments
CHAPTER 1: Breaking without Fixing: Inhabiting Aporia - Jake Burdick, Jennifer A. Sandlin, and Michael P. O’Malley
PART ONE: FRAMING
FIRST APORETIC TURN || A FRAME || JORGE R. LUCERO featuring the
work of Samantha Hill, The Great Migration Project
CHAPTER 2: Making Pedagogy Public: For the Public, of the Public,
or in the Interest of Publicness? - Gert Biesta
CHAPTER 3: Public Pedagogy as an Historically Feminist Project -
Audrey M. Dentith, Michael P. O’Malley, and Jeanne F. Brady
CHAPTER 4: Putrid Deadagogies: Zombie Life and the Rise of the
Chaosmopolis - Jason J. Wallin
CHAPTER 5: “Pushing Against”: Relationality, Intentionality, and
the Ethical Imperative of Pedagogy - Rubén A. Gaztambide-Fernández
and Alexandra Arráiz Matute
CHAPTER 6: Pedagogy in the Public Realm: Affective Diagrams of
Thinking Feeling in the X-Men and Beyond - jan jagodzinski
PART TWO: STUDYING
SECOND APORETIC TURN || A STUDY || JORGE R. LUCERO featuring the
work of Jim Duignan and Stockyard Institute, The Nomadic Studio
CHAPTER 7: Chasing the Phantoms of Public Pedagogy: Political,
Popular, and Concrete Publics - Glenn C. Savage
CHAPTER 8: Problematizing the Public Intellectual: Foucault,
Activism, and Critical Public Pedagogy - Jory Brass
CHAPTER 9: Turning Down the Dead Father: Eidolons in Public
Pedagogy Research and Theorizing - Jake Burdick and Jennifer A.
Sandlin
CHAPTER 10: Little Public Spheres - Anna Hickey-Moody
PART THREE: ENACTING
THIRD APORETIC TURN || AN ENACTMENT || JORGE R. LUCERO featuring
the work of Bert Stabler and Mike Bancroft, The Piñata Project
CHAPTER 11: How to Be an Artist by Night: Critical Public Pedagogy
and Double Ontology - Stephanie Springgay and The Torontonians
CHAPTER 12: Reclaiming the Public in Public Pedagogy: A
Conversation between Christopher G. Robbins and Suzanne Lacy -
Christopher G. Robbins and Suzanne Lacy
CHAPTER 13: 3,417 Footnotes: Troubling the Public Pedagogy of
CReATE - Isabel Nuñez, Pamela Konkol, and Brian D. Schultz
CHAPTER 14: Long Live the Pedagogical Turn: Brazen Claims Made for
the Overflowing Art/Life Intersection and the Longevity of its
Eternal Pedagogy and Study - Jorge R. Lucero
CHAPTER 15: Dolls as Dangerous Style: Occupying Public Spaces in
Education Through Aesthetic Social Action - Morna M. McDermott
Contributors
Jake Burdick is Assistant Professor of Curriculum Studies at Purdue University, USA.
Jennifer A. Sandlin is Associate Professor in the Justice and Social Inquiry Program within the School of Social Transformation at Arizona State University, USA.
Michael P. O’Malley is Associate Professor of Educational and Community Leadership and Director of the Ph.D. in Education-School Improvement Program at Texas State University, USA.
“Ideas bubble up in the work of this volume, not because anyone has
a fully worked-out and internally consistent argument as well as a
set of concrete action steps that will take us from here to
there—there being some vibrant and viable future characterized by
peace and love and joy and justice—but because [of] the necessary
sense of perpetual uncertainty that accompanies social learning
while at the same time trying to upend the system of oppression and
exploitation, opening spaces for more participatory democracy, more
peace, more ideas, and more fair-dealing in large and small
matters.”
William Ayers, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA (1987-2010).
From the Foreword“With a concern for the emancipatory ends public
pedagogical work might engage, and the role that public pedagogues
might play in publics that are increasingly marginalised,
splintered, under attack and corporatised, this book represents a
significant contribution to the literature of public pedagogy.”
Andrew Hickey, University of Southern Queensland, Australia
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