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Michalinos Zembylas – Current Issues in Comparative Education, 2024
This conceptual paper suggests the notion of 'affective justice' as a means to critically address the problem of sentimentalism within Human Rights Education (HRE). Originating in sociolegal studies affective justice focuses on how legal frameworks for human rights generate embodied, affective experiences that allow learners to engage deeply with…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Learner Engagement, Justice, Psychological Patterns
Zembylas, Professor Michalinos – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2022
This article contributes to conversations around difficult knowledge in pedagogy by (a) investigating how post-truth claims about issues of race and racism may constitute forms of difficult knowledge, and (b) proposing that fostering 'affective solidarity' can constitute a productive pedagogical response to post-truth claims, because it moves…
Descriptors: Racism, Teaching Methods, Ethics, Affective Behavior
Karen Gravett; Simon Lygo-Baker – Studies in Higher Education, 2025
In this article, we examine how thinking with affect theory offers fertility within higher education studies to see and do teaching and learning differently. For many educators in universities, the idea that teaching is a cognitive process of information transmission is still taken-for-granted. These beliefs are visible through the persistence of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Emotional Response, Psychological Patterns, Affective Behavior
Frans Kruger; Michalinos Zembylas – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2024
Two recent lines of inquiry that have emerged in educational philosophy and research are the turn to affect theory and the call for decolonising education. Although there have been some efforts to bring these two lines of inquiry together and inform educational philosophy and research, there is still important conceptual work to be done,…
Descriptors: Peace, Educational Philosophy, Decolonization, Teaching Methods
Zembylas, Michalinos – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2023
This article argues that a combined lens of affect theory and the aesthetics of religion provides scholarship with new methodological and theoretical insights for phenomenological religious education. These insights demonstrate the analytic value of understanding religion in terms of its affective and aesthetic dimensions, which offer renewed…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Religious Education, Aesthetics, Religious Factors
Mulcahy, Dianne; Healy, Sarah – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
This article contributes new insights to research on citizenship and young citizen subject formation in the context of the posthuman condition. Bringing a feminist materialist sensibility to bear, we explore citizenship as "materially" mobilised and produced. Considering the constitutive role that embodied and affective phenomena play in…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Feminism, Affective Behavior, Vignettes
Zembylas, Michalinos – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2023
This article contributes to contemporary theorising in comparative education by exploring how narratives of 'victims' and 'perpetrators' in postcolonial settings are understood in terms of affective justice. "Affective justice" is introduced as a framework for understanding justice as an affective practice. Through the analysis of two…
Descriptors: Postcolonialism, Victims, Social Justice, Comparative Education
Buckley, Sarah; Sullivan, Peter – Mathematics Education Research Journal, 2023
In this article, educational and psychological perspectives are used to examine how anxiety and uncertainty in the mathematics classroom can be reframed to benefit mathematical teaching and learning. Links between anxiety and uncertainty are discussed and from this discussion, two methods are proposed for reducing the negative impact of…
Descriptors: Mathematics Anxiety, Emotional Response, Self Control, Teaching Methods
Zembylas, Michalinos – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2022
This paper analyses the emotional governance of responses to terrorist attacks and examines the extent to which affective pedagogies in civic education may contest the emotional norms that are institutionalised in society. This analysis is important, not only because it makes visible how forms of violence (especially terrorism) have an emotional…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Terrorism, Self Control, Emotional Response
Wen Xu – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2024
The growth of the Chinese language in African countries and African students' consequent flocking into Chinese higher education are both emergent phenomena. This partly explains the lack of empirical research on this body of student migrants and their Chinese language learning. This paper applies Watkins' theorisation on pedagogic affect to…
Descriptors: Chinese, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Foreign Students
Zembylas, Michalinos – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2020
This article explores how Jean François Lyotard reflects on affect as unrepresentable in relation to contemporary affect theory and specifically post-Deleuzian perspectives and non-representational theories suggesting that we need to invent new theoretical ways of addressing our more-than-textual, multisensual worlds. The essay leans on this…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Teaching Methods, Intervention, Educational Theories
Vitullo, Adrienne – Children's Literature in Education, 2022
Providing spaces for adolescents to make sense of the world around them is often the work of educators, specifically those in Language Arts classrooms. In the current historical moment, adolescents often must make sense of the ways socio-political conflict impacts their world. Displacement, often an effect of socio-political conflict, is…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Language Arts, Teaching Methods, Conflict
Zembylas, Michalinos – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2020
This article examines the important role of affect in pedagogical efforts to engage students with complicity in the social justice classroom. Recent theoretical shifts on affect and complicity enable education scholars and practitioners to move the focus away from what we do not want (i.e., more complicity) toward anti-complicity. The new openings…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Teaching Methods, Political Attitudes, Learner Engagement
Zembylas, Michalinos – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2022
This article engages with the notion of 'post-fascism' in contemporary times, and explores how attention to the affective ideology of post-fascism can inform pedagogical thinking that cultivates an "anti-fascist sensibility" in education. It is argued that to do so, it is necessary to somehow break fascism's grip on the body and its…
Descriptors: Authoritarianism, Political Attitudes, Ideology, Affective Behavior
Osgood, Jayne; Odegard, Nina – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2022
In this paper we explore what decentring the child in posthumanism does to our research practices, to our conceptualisations of and relationalities to the child. Crucially, we explore the imperative for other ways to encounter the child -- that pursue a decolonising and de/recentralising agenda. We pursue tentacular lines of enquiry through a…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Sensory Experience, Teaching Methods, Sustainability