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Showing 1 to 15 of 101 results Save | Export
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Romain Mollard – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
The article explores several tensions in Bernard Stiegler's philosophy of education. This article evaluates the epistemological and philosophical significance of the Prometheus myth in Stiegler's work. It also examines Stiegler's biographical reflections on how he became a philosopher, alongside his understanding of psychoanalysis (given Freud's…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Mythology, Psychiatry, Foreign Countries
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Farrelly, Matthew R. – Environmental Education Research, 2023
Framing education ecologically and cultivating an environmental consciousness in the way Michael Bonnett has articulated poses a fresh challenge to educators to identify the latent aspects of educational philosophy and practice that are rooted in an Enlightenment 'metaphysic of mastery'. In 'The Significance of Myth for Environmental Education'…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Consciousness Raising, Imagination, Mythology
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Koopal, Wiebe; Vlieghe, Joris; De Baets, Thomas – Ethics and Education, 2022
This article problematizes the view that music education is primarily justified on account of its uniquely "humanizing" influence. Not only does this general humanist argument clearly fail to convince policy-makers to actually revalidate public music education, but moreover it often seems to rest on highly questionable premises. Without…
Descriptors: Music Education, Public Education, Humanization, Animals
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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
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Huft, Justin – Teaching Sociology, 2022
Framing as a metacommunicative device establishes the narrative of a given story and mobilizes emotional support. Within the framework of monster theory, horror movies are seen as a way of framing common fears about moral decay, concerns about the future, anxiety about outgroup members, and spiritual unknowns. In the classroom, we explore the…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Communication (Thought Transfer), Narration, Social Attitudes
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Busch, Gillian; Theobald, Maryanne; Hayes, Marion – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2023
This paper argues that when young children are given an opportunity for their voice to be heard, they are competent communicators and social agents who can co-create cultural practices as theory makers. The paper draws on video recorded data from a small study that focussed on how young children (3-5 years) participated in an end-of-year cultural…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Childrens Attitudes, Preschool Children, Concept Formation
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Beeman, Chris; Blenkinsop, Sean – Journal of Environmental Education, 2021
In this paper, Cassandra's role in the ancient Greek myth of the fall of Troy, as one given the gift of prophesy but cursed to be disbelieved, is explored with a view to understanding the apparently powerless position of climate justice and environmental activism to change public policy. To make this case, we re-interpret the myth of Cassandra to…
Descriptors: Climate, Sustainability, Environmental Education, Activism
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El Nouhy, Eman – Children's Literature in Education, 2019
For decades, feminists have tried to dismantle and argue against the image of the Medusa as a figure of female monstrousness. This paper claims that the celebrated British author and poet Ted Hughes, in his novella for children, The Iron Woman, redeemed the Medusa and presented her in a new light that revealed her as a victim, a healer, and a…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Females, Novels, Environment
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Kruse, Marc; Tanchuk, Nicolas; Hamilton, Robert – Educational Theory, 2019
The Anishinaabe Seven Fires Creation Story can be read as a theory on which all human beings share a fundamental love of reflecting reality in what they think and do. In this article, Marc Kruse, Nicolas Tanchuk, and Robert Hamilton argue that this ethical theory is correct but that the colonial ideology taught in our schools can obscure our…
Descriptors: American Indians, Indigenous Knowledge, Mythology, Ethics
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Arukask, Madis – Multilingua: Journal of Cross-Cultural and Interlanguage Communication, 2021
This article focuses on the concept of "letter" in oral folklore. The main research material is examples from the older folk songs of Seto, where a letter, a book and other items referring to literacy are mentioned. Texts under consideration are poetical and the meaning conveyed in them is not always very clear. The term…
Descriptors: Oral Tradition, Folk Culture, Mythology, Singing
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Silova, Iveta – European Education, 2018
Professor Kazamias has argued that comparative education has lost its "soul," by abandoning its historical and humanist episteme in the first half of the 20th century and turning to an ahistorical and nonhumanist social science today. This essay takes the readers on a journey across time and space in search of comparative education's…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Humanism, Mythology, Medieval History
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Tasdan, Tugçe Elif – Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies, 2018
Intertextuality, the term defining the relationship and the similarity of a newly-produced text with previous ones, has provided a broad array of subjects to be studied especially in social sciences. Firstly, literary works have been analyzed within the framework of intertextuality, and striking similarities have been found among literary texts.…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Literature, Role, Mythology
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Theobald, Maryanne; Busch, Gillian; Danby, Susan – Global Studies of Childhood, 2018
Investigating children's pop cultures that rely on myth-making provide understandings about how children are active agents in the socialization into cultural and moral practices in their everyday lives. An annual visit to Santa Claus is important in children's pop culture in the Western world, however, the social practices associated with the…
Descriptors: Children, Socialization, Popular Culture, Cultural Context
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Bartie, Angela; Fleming, Linda; Freeman, Mark; Hulme, Tom; Hutton, Alexander; Readman, Paul – History of Education, 2019
Historical pageants were important sites of popular engagement with the past in twentieth-century Britain. They took place in many places and sometimes on a large scale, in settings ranging from small villages to industrial cities. They were staged by schools, churches, professional organisations, women's groups and political parties, among…
Descriptors: Educational History, Foreign Countries, Ceremonies, Mythology
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Kaufmann, Daniel A. – Journal of Instructional Research, 2019
The use of the monomyth to shape the narratives of fiction with deep meanings, while feeling both new and recognizable, is consistently experienced across all cultures throughout time. As past publications have utilized this approach to subconscious symbolism to explain many experiences, it has not yet been utilized to explain the process of…
Descriptors: Counselor Training, Counselor Educators, Reflection, Teacher Attitudes
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