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  • The joy of learning: Feminist materialist pedagogies and the freedom of education

    Author(s)
    Tamboukou, Maria
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Tamboukou, Maria
    Year published
    2018
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    In this article, I trace lines of materialist pedagogies in the history of women workers’ education following feminist interpretations of Spinoza’s assemblage of joyful affects. More particularly, I focus on the notions of laetitia [joy], gaudium [gladness] and hilaritas [cheerfulness] as entanglements of joy and trace their expression in practices and discourses inscribed in archival documents that I have reassembled around the theme of women workers’ education. My reading of Ethics follows a range of feminist thinkers that have engaged with Spinoza’s ‘ethics of joy’ in education and beyond. The article draws on extensive ...
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    In this article, I trace lines of materialist pedagogies in the history of women workers’ education following feminist interpretations of Spinoza’s assemblage of joyful affects. More particularly, I focus on the notions of laetitia [joy], gaudium [gladness] and hilaritas [cheerfulness] as entanglements of joy and trace their expression in practices and discourses inscribed in archival documents that I have reassembled around the theme of women workers’ education. My reading of Ethics follows a range of feminist thinkers that have engaged with Spinoza’s ‘ethics of joy’ in education and beyond. The article draws on extensive archival work with personal auto/biographical documents and public essays of women workers/educators/writers in Paris and New York that span the period between 1830 and 1950. What I argue is that it is the experience of creative and radical education that has created a platform for workers to re-imagine themselves in the world with others.
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    Journal Title
    EDUCATIONAL PHILOSOPHY AND THEORY
    Volume
    50
    Issue
    9
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1080/00131857.2017.1396213
    Subject
    Specialist studies in education
    Cognitive and computational psychology
    History and philosophy of specific fields
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/383496
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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