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Hostetler, Karl D. – Educational Theory, 2018
In this article Karl Hostetler portrays teachers as tragic ironists whose existence is prone to "playful disruptions of the soul," when the meaning and value of ideas pertinent to teaching--including "teaching" itself--become puzzling, prompting a reassessment and reinvigoration of those ideas. In developing his concept of…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Tragedy, Figurative Language, Greek Civilization
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McGrew, Ken – Educational Theory, 2016
In this essay Ken McGrew critically examines the "school-to-prison pipeline" metaphor and associated literature. The origins and influence of the metaphor are compared with the origins and influence of the competing "prison industrial complex" concept. Specific weaknesses in the "pipeline literature" are examined.…
Descriptors: Educational Practices, Correctional Institutions, Figurative Language, Educational Theories
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Kouppanou, Anna – Educational Theory, 2016
In this essay Anna Kouppanou expands the notion of metaphor from its received meaning to refer to an embodied and material process of connectedness that transforms the domains that it brings together. Because of metaphor's reliance on materiality and exteriority Kouppanou turns to literary texts, which she calls "metaphoric machines." In…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Literary Styles, Reader Text Relationship, Printed Materials
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McAlhany, Joseph – Educational Theory, 2014
Terence's famous humanistic motto, "homo sum: humani nil a me alienum puto," was transmitted from antiquity to modernity as an isolated fragment of a surviving play, and was subjected to various forms of translation and interpretation. In this essay, Joseph McAlhany argues that fragments and translation, by their nature, resist…
Descriptors: Translation, Humanism, Figurative Language, Discourse Analysis
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Wharram, C. C. – Educational Theory, 2014
In this essay C. C. Wharram argues that Terence's concept of translation as a form of "contamination" anticipates recent developments in philosophy, ecology, and translation studies. Placing these divergent fields of inquiry into dialogue enables us read Terence's well-known statement "I am a human being--I deem nothing…
Descriptors: Translation, Philosophy, Ecology, Humanism
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Zembylas, Michalinos – Educational Theory, 2013
Michalinos Zembylas examines how history education can be reconceived in terms of Jacques Derrida's notion of "hauntology," that is, as an ongoing conversation with the "ghost"--in the case of this essay, the ghosts of disappeared victims of war and dictatorship. Here, Zembylas uses hauntology as both metaphor and pedagogical methodology for…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Authoritarianism, History Instruction, Victims
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Worley, Virginia – Educational Theory, 2012
Analyzing Montaigne's triptych painting, "Of the Education of Children," reveals a series of ever-morphing, Dorian Gray-like canvases that depict metaphor mutations through which Montaigne defined education by distinguishing between schooling a child into a learned man and educating him into an able, active, and gentle person. Montaigne used…
Descriptors: Etymology, Educational Philosophy, Figurative Language, Lifelong Learning
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Burke, Kevin; Greteman, Adam – Educational Theory, 2013
In the current essay, Kevin Burke and Adam Greteman challenge this thing called love by looking at how we might instead "like" in education. Within education, multiculturalism can be viewed as a way of loving, or learning to love, diversity and, as such, learning to love the self; this tendency is notably apparent in the recent rise of concern…
Descriptors: Intimacy, Social Theories, Cultural Pluralism, Self Esteem
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Lewis, Tyson E. – Educational Theory, 2012
In this essay Tyson Lewis reevaluates Jean-Jacques Rousseau's assessment of the pedagogical value of fables in Emile's education using Giorgio Agamben's theory of poetic production and Thomas Keenan's theory of the inherent ambiguity of the fable. From this perspective, the "unreadable" nature of the fable that Rousseau exposed is not simply the…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Figurative Language, Literary Genres, Children
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Boyum, Steinar – Educational Theory, 2010
Strangely, the concept of philosophical education is not much in use, at least not as a "philosophical" concept. In this essay, Steinar Boyum attempts to outline such a philosophical concept of philosophical education. Boyum uses Plato's Allegory of the Cave, Rene Descartes's life of doubt, and Immanuel Kant's criticism of metaphysics as paradigms…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Philosophy, Education, Figurative Language
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Cook-Sather, Alison – Educational Theory, 2009
Alison Cook-Sather begins this review essay with a discussion of David Tyack and Larry Cuban's generative phrase "the grammar of schooling" to provide context for her examination of three texts that address the challenges of school reform: John Sylvester Lofty's "Quiet Wisdom: Teachers in the United States and England Talk About…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Educational Philosophy, Figurative Language, Educational Change
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O'Neill, Linda – Educational Theory, 2007
Hans-Georg Gadamer has been criticized by a wide range of feminist scholars who argue that his work neglects feminine aspects of understanding, many of which are essential to sound theorizing about educational contexts. In this essay, Linda O'Neill employs Virginia Woolf's classic gender analysis both as a foil for Gadamer's philosophical…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Epistemology, Feminism, Educational Policy
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Hansen, David T. – Educational Theory, 2004
In this article, I elucidate the idea of a poetics of teaching and outline its value to scholars and teachers who seek a deeper understanding of the practice. A poetics of teaching draws together aesthetic, intellectual, and moral dimensions of the work that are often treated separately, if treated at all, in both research and in the classroom. In…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Intellectual Disciplines, Teaching Methods, Teaching (Occupation)