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Mordechai Gordon – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
This essay analyzes the educational significance of the metaphysical novel, that is, how it can be used to educate ourselves and our students. Mordechai Gordon begins by describing the nature of the metaphysical novel while contrasting it to "pure" philosophy and theory building. Gordon also situates Beauvoir's insights in the broader…
Descriptors: Philosophy, French Literature, Novels, Essays
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Jeffrey Clapp – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
The ethics of care has regularly been described "via" contrast with deontological, consequentialist, and virtue theories of ethics. Often, such descriptions play care and justice against one another as potentially congruent but frequently competing social goods. This articulation of the field, which moves across major perspectives within…
Descriptors: Ethics, Caring, Literature, Humanities
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Bojesen, Emile – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2018
This paper does not present an advocacy of a passive education as opposed to an active education nor does it propose that passive education is in any way 'better' or more important than active education. Through readings of Maurice Blanchot, Jacques Derrida and B.S. Johnson, and gentle critiques of Jacques Rancière and John Dewey, passive…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Teaching Methods, Student Role, Teacher Role
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Curzon-Hobson, Aidan – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2017
When "The Myth of Sisyphus" describes those who live in the "rarefied air of the absurd" (p. 86), Camus uses the word fidelity. This signals a recognition of both defeat and the demand for struggle. This suggests a humility. Education can be said to have this characteristic; it is constantly in service to the new and yet…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Self Concept, Fidelity, Imagery
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Franke, Norman – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2017
This paper explores Bakhtin's reception of Goethe's "Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre" with a view to assess how Bakhtin's interest in this early chronotopical masterpiece can be understood in the wider context of his utopian thinking and his political eschatologies. Bakhtin reads Goethe's novel as a critique of totalitarian forms of Socialist…
Descriptors: Novels, Philosophy, Social Systems, Political Attitudes
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Gregory, Nuala – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2015
This article brings together and compares my own artistic practice of drawing/painting and the eighteenth-century novel "Tristram Shandy." In both cases, there is a free play of lines, textual or graphic, which sets "all things out of rule". A whole typology of lines is woven throughout Sterne's text and reappears,…
Descriptors: Novels, Painting (Visual Arts), Freehand Drawing, Metacognition
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Frank, Jeff – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2014
The aim of this article is to establish--and explore--James Baldwin's significance for educational theory. Through a close reading of "Everybody's Protest Novel", I show that Baldwin's thinking is an important (if unrecognized) precursor to the work of Stanley Cavell and Cora Diamond, and is relevant to a number of…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Novels, Racial Bias, Race
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Curzon-Hobson, Aidan – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2014
The purpose of this article is to make a case for "The Rebel" as an important educational text. Discussing "The Rebel" in this way for the first time, the goal is to try and demonstrate that the work could have a unique contribution; in particular there might be a number of similarities between Camus and educational thinkers…
Descriptors: Novels, Authors, Relevance (Education), Teaching Methods
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Heraud, Richard – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2013
In one of his notebooks, Albert Camus describes, "The stranger," "The myth of Sisyphus," "Caligula" and "The misunderstanding" as pertaining to a series; a schema that suggests that if one were to write about one of these literary works, one would be writing about parts of a whole unless one also engaged…
Descriptors: Novels, Nonfiction, Philosophy, Authors
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Schwieler, Elias – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2013
Joseph Conrad's "The Secret Sharer" has often been associated with what can be called initiation stories. However, in this article I argue that Conrad's text is more than that. It can, I suggest, be read as an allegory of the inaccessibility to reveal the essence of being in command, being in education, and also the…
Descriptors: Novels, Educational Philosophy, Literary Devices, Twentieth Century Literature
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Curzon-Hobson, Aidan – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2013
This article examines the concept of the stranger and the experience of strangeness in Albert Camus's "The Stranger." These themes have a range of synergies with educational thought. They also lead us to other concepts that may have a place in educational debate, in particular the concepts of the absurd and rebellion. This train of thought also…
Descriptors: Novels, Educational Philosophy, Educational Practices, Teaching Methods
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Gibbons, Andrew – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2013
The infamous story of a young office clerk called Meursault has long entertained literary critics, scholars, musicians, artists and school teachers for the light and shadow that it reveals around and on the human condition. His character has been lauded as existential hero and rebuked as lacking agency. In this article, his story, in Camus'…
Descriptors: Novels, French Literature, Philosophy, Student Role
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Smith, Richard – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2013
It is sometimes said that we are strangers to ourselves, bearers of internal alterity, as well as to each other. The profounder this strangeness then the greater the difficulty of giving any systematic account of it without paradox: of supposing that our obscurity to ourselves can readily be illuminated. To attempt such an account, in defiance of…
Descriptors: Novels, Nineteenth Century Literature, English Literature, Self Concept
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Roberts, Peter – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2013
In Fyodor Dostoevsky's influential novel "Notes from underground", we find one of the most memorable characters in nineteenth century literature. The Underground Man, around whom everything else in this book revolves, is in some respects utterly repugnant: he is self-centred, obsessive and cruel. Yet he is also highly intelligent,…
Descriptors: Novels, Nineteenth Century Literature, Philosophy, Social Distance
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Hung, Ruyu – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2013
This article explores a significant question, implicit in Kafka's novel "Metamorphosis," explicitly asked by Rorty: "Can I care about a stranger?" Alphonso Lingis's view is adopted to overcome a mainstream belief that there is a distinction between my community and the stranger's community, or us community and…
Descriptors: Novels, Twentieth Century Literature, Stranger Reactions, Caring
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