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Andrew Rejan – English Journal, 2025
In this article, the author reflected on the challenges and opportunities that emerged as they introduced climate fiction, or cli-fi reading and writing into the curriculum, including the author's attempts to navigate the politics of the genre, activate the students' imagination and interest, and invite the students to become creators as well as…
Descriptors: Climate, Fiction, Reading Instruction, Writing Instruction
de Carvalho Ferrasa, Ingrid Aline; Machado, Elaine Ferreira; Miquelin, Awdry Feisser; Mocellin, Ronei Clécio; Leal, Bruna Elise Sauer; Kuchla, Micheli; Oliveira, Luciane Kawa Reis; Coelho, Adriane Marie Salm – Science & Education, 2023
In this article, we present reflections on the possible dialogs between literary creation and science teaching. Our considerations will be directed to the work of Mary Shelley, Frankenstein, and the role of science and science education over the text that gave rise to the genre "science fiction." This work aims at presenting the…
Descriptors: Fiction, Science Instruction, Science Education, Authors
Catriona Cunningham; Jennie Mills – Teaching in Higher Education, 2024
Increasing numbers of researchers in the field of higher education research are searching for meaning rather than metrics: something in their data that call to them and that make their hearts soar. This paper leans into post-qualitative approaches and attempts to resist methodological arrest, drawing on the disciplinary language of literary…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Research, Fiction, Literary Criticism
Moreira, Paulo – Hispania, 2022
This article looks into the place of Machado de Assis in literature and his peculiar treatment of intertextual sources through a careful analysis of three short stories from the collection "Histórias sem data." "The Devil's Church," "An Alexandrian Tale," and "The Academies of Siam" are clearly set apart…
Descriptors: Fiction, Authors, Portuguese, Latin American Literature
Chang, Hawk – Children's Literature in Education, 2023
The mysterious and unspoken secrets of life can be a source of fascination for young people. The bildungsroman quest for identity is often coupled with a protagonist's attempts to decode a range of secrets. Jamaica Kincaid's work of fiction, "Annie John" (1985), illustrates this journey. In this novel, the female protagonist's maturity…
Descriptors: Females, Self Concept, Novels, Fiction
S. Marek Muller – Communication Teacher, 2024
This original teaching idea is designed for a course unit on protest communication. It consists of a performed protest speech, dubbed the "fantastical speech," and a post-speech reflective analysis. Students utilize the subversive genre of fanfiction to compose a protest speech in which, as a fictional character, they convince their…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Public Speaking, Fiction, Role Playing
Bacalja, Alexander; Bliss, Lauren; Bulfer, Matthew – Asia Pacific Journal of Education, 2023
This paper explores how Australian literature mandated for study in the Victorian senior English curriculum creates opportunities for problematizing central myths about Australia. We engage with Homi Bhabha's notion of ambivalence to demonstrate how representations of colonization, rurality and migration reflect discursive formations of Australia.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English Curriculum, English Instruction, Fiction
Punya Mishra; Nicole Oster; Phoebe Wagner – International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education, 2024
This paper combines social fiction and academic analysis to envision hopeful futures for higher education. At the heart of the exploration is Phoebe Wagner's speculative fiction piece, "University, Speaking," which personifies a university grappling with environmental, political, and social change. Phoebe Wagner's first-person narrative…
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Higher Education, Fiction, Community Attitudes
Kuttybayev Shokankhan; Kassym Balkiya; Issayeva Zhazira Isayevna; Koblanova Aiman; Moldagali Bakytgul – Novitas-ROYAL (Research on Youth and Language), 2024
This comparative study looks into the image of the wolf in Genghis Aitmatov's "Plakha" and Jack London's "White Fang." For this purpose, first, the concept of the wolf in fiction is discussed, and the representation of wolves in these two texts is analyzed. This study explores the relationship between wolves and human beings as…
Descriptors: Novels, Imagery, Animals, Fiction
Rudrum, David – Policy Futures in Education, 2022
Over the years, a small industry has sprung up dedicated to preserving writers' homes and birthplaces, offering the chance to see first-hand the circumstances under which their key texts were written. Experiencing an insight into, say, Wordsworth's Dove Cottage, or Hardy's Wessex cottage, or the Bronte parsonage in Haworth, is widely held to be an…
Descriptors: Literature, History, Authors, Cultural Maintenance
Hosier, Allison – portal: Libraries and the Academy, 2022
As library and information science scholars, we know that context matters in research because we study how various populations look for information. The information-seeking behaviors of creative people, however, are something of a blank spot in our scholarly literature. Studies of creative writers are especially rare. This study used writers'…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Research, Fiction, Information Seeking
Truman, Sarah E. – Research in Education, 2023
This paper argues that the contemporary climate crises we see around our planet correlate with a colonial crisis of (literary) imagination. The author engages with Caribbean literary scholar Sylvia Wynter and other anti-colonial scholars to trace how the colonial literary imagination is rooted in the euro-western humanism and racial capitalism…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Literature Appreciation, English Literature, Climate
Britten, Adrielle – Children's Literature in Education, 2022
War, like other stressful situations and experiences, entails a threat to one's subjective well-being, and war fiction for children represents this threat in different ways: some narratives minimise it, and others do not. War fiction, then, provides material for a case study of war and its impact on representations of subjective well-being (SWB),…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Childrens Literature, Well Being, War
Biama, Teresia Muthoni; Oketch, Selline A.; Kimathi, Caroline Kinuu – African Educational Research Journal, 2022
This article focused on the voice of resistance and activism in Imbolo Mbue's "How Beautiful We Were" (2021). The novel voices the environmental injustices and the disastrous consequences of oil corporations. The people of Kosawa know that something is wrong with the land they're living on. They receive acid rain, rivers have grown…
Descriptors: Resistance (Psychology), Activism, Fiction, Justice
Cremin, Teresa; Hendry, Helen – English in Education, 2022
This paper, drawing on Margaret Meek Spencer's work, considers the value of reflecting on literacy histories, whether of children, teachers, authors or academics. Margaret argued that teachers need to be open to literacy as lived, and to look, listen and learn about literacies that develop "without" direct instruction and stretch beyond…
Descriptors: Literacy, Literacy Education, Story Telling, Play