Introduction: Transgressing Frontiers through the Radicalization of Pedagogy, Simon Springer, Marcelo Lopes de Souza, and Richard J. White / 1. Toward a Radical Theory of Learning: Prefiguration as Legitimate Peripheral Participation, Joe Curnow / 2. Radicalizing Pedagogy: Geography and Libertarian Pedagogy Between the Nineteenth and the Twentieth Centuries, Federico Ferretti / 3. Zapatismo Versus the Neoliberal University: Towards a Pedagogy Against Oblivion, Levi Gahman / 4. Pedagogy in Geographical Expeditions: Detroit and East Lansing, Ronald J. Horvath / 5. Fuller Geographies And The Care-Ful Co-Production of Transgressive Pedagogies, Or ‘Who Cares?’, Kye Askins and Kelvin Mason / 6. Anarchism and Informal Informal Pedagogy: ‘Gangs’, Difference, Deference, Richard McHugh / 7. Destroy the School and Create a Free School: Digging up the Roots of Dominant/Submissive Complexes and Planting the Seeds of Cooperative Social Interaction, Erik Taje / 8. Educating for Earth Consciousness: Ecopedagogy within Early Anarchist Geography, Francisco Toro / 9. Cycling Diaries: Moving Towards an Anarchist Field Trip Pedagogy, Ferdinand Stenglein and Simon Mader / 10. Learning Through The Soles of Our Feet: Unschooling, Anarchism, and the Geography of Childhood, Simon Springer / Index / Notes on Contributors
Simon Springer is Associate Professor of Geography at University of
Victoria, Canada
Marcelo Lopes de Souza is Professor of Geography at the Federal
University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ), Brazil.
Richard J. White is Reader in Economic Geography at Sheffield
Hallam University, UK
This book has changed my understanding of the discipline of
geography – and its relationship to radical education; renewed my
resolve to do something about the direction of travel in
contemporary education; and refreshed my ideas on how to go about.
I hope it will do the same for other colleagues – from the worlds
of both research and activism.
*Anarchist Studies*
[T]he real strengths of this edited collection emerge from the
empirical and practical components […] these practical offerings
are a clear insight, without being formulaic, into how other
geographers are engaging with radical pedagogy. I imagine that,
similarly, as an initial exploration of radical pedagogy, this
“anarcho-geographical pedagogy call to action” (p.19) should prove
useful to those who initiated the inquiry into anarchist geography
and to those who raised questions about how to move forward with
these types of projects. As such, this edited collection will be of
interest not only to geographers, but also to colearners in the
fields of sociology, cultural studies, international studies,
development studies, social theory, political sciences,
international relations, economics, and anthropology.
*Antipode: A Radical Journal of Geography*
Radicalization offers hopeful and unique reflections on moments of
transgressive pedagogy at our contemporary moment and throughout
geography’s history. For educators looking for a prescriptive guide
for how to transform your pedagogical practices to produce more
radical students, you will find no easy answers in this volume....
[T]he volume offers provocative questions for rethinking our own
pedagogical praxis.... Indeed, for those seeking inspiration for
how to rethink their roles as educators, parents or students, this
collection is rife with evidence, reflection and testimonial that
offer multiple ways to reimagine how geographic inquiry can better
incorporate a ‘spirit of revolt’.
*Radical Pedagogy*
Anarchism’s intersection with Geography is unavoidable and this
collection of experiences, histories and manifestos enjoins
discussion, inspiration and fascination.
*James D. Sidaway, Professor of Political Geography, National
University of Singapore*
The Radicalization of Pedagogy not only brings together an amazing
set of essays that showcase the pedagogical insights that anarchist
geographies contain, it also shows how the active engagement with
anarchist traditions is transformative. One of the central themes
of this book is the intimate relationship between methods of
learning and the construction of knowledges. Anarchist geographers
not only challenge fixed, state-centric conceptions of the world
but develop collaborative and egalitarian approaches to knowledge
acquisition as part of the process. In doing so, they blur the
lines between learners and educators and generate critical
perspectives rooted in local and lived experience. Springer, de
Souza and White's inspiring collection reveals what anarchists have
contributed to geography and describes what geography might still
discover by developing anarchist insights.
*Ruth Kinna, Professor of Political Theory, Loughborough
University*
Thanks to editors and contributors alike for this excellent and
compelling collection and for invoking Kropotkin's 'spirit of
revolt'! In this quietist and cynical era, it is surely well
past-time to radically rethink every one of our pedagogical
imaginarias, from teaching and classrooms, to the industrial
university to what we demand from the people, and especially the
kids, around us. This book is both theoretically challenging and
accessibly inviting enough to add significant fuel to anyone’s
interest in solidarity, mutual aid and a liberation from
pedagogy.
*Matt Hern, Activist, Director of the Purple Thistle Centre,
Co-Director of 2+10 Industries and author of Field Day: Getting
Society Out of School.*
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