ABSTRACT

This book explores the usage and significance of the word "like" across a wide range of disciplines, focusing in particular on its influence in education and pedagogy. From the advent of the "like button" on Facebook to the common verbal tic, liking has become an integral part of our everyday lives. By drawing on feminist, queer, and other critical traditions, the authors evaluate this phenomenon in order to interrogate its history, its linguistic function, its role in labor and economics, and its ties to, and separation from, religion. As the notion of "like" becomes more and more ubiquitous, this critical volume demonstrates the need to consider like, liking, and likeability when thinking about the institutions that impact us daily.

chapter 1|26 pages

On the Ubiquity of Like

chapter 2|18 pages

Critique, Writing, and Research

On Liking Academic Labor

chapter 3|18 pages

The Scandals of Liking

Between Religion and Sexuality

chapter 4|15 pages

On Liking Pedagogical Relationships

Accompaniment, Bargaining, and Friendship

chapter 5|21 pages

To Be Liked

On the Politics and Ethics of Likability

chapter 6|18 pages

Love Has Won, So Now What?

A Politics of Liking

chapter 7|8 pages

Tending Toward and Away from Liking