ABSTRACT

What role can desire play in pedagogical interaction? In Learning Desire , contributors from the fields of education, cultural studies, psychoanalysis and literary theory explore the many ways desire intersects with knowledge, recognition, fantasy, and embodiment, and what this can mean for transformative pedagogical practice. While acknowledging the productive and destructive force desire can have on the learning experience, the authors offer engaging, innovative modes of thinking about teaching and thinking about desire as an education tool. This volume, rooted in theory, is one also geared towards practice; in taking a fresh look at the limits and possibilities of a transformative pedagogy, it will also give teachers and students new languages for articulating their experiences in the classroom and beyond.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

Desiring Desire in Rethinking Pedagogy

part 1|58 pages

Desire and Knowledge

chapter 1|27 pages

Psychoanalysis and Education

Teaching Terminable and Interminable

chapter 2|28 pages

Learning the Subject of Desire

part 2|41 pages

Desire and Recognition

chapter 3|21 pages

Fantasy's Confines

Popular Culture and the Education of the Female Primary-School Teacher

chapter 4|17 pages

Say Me to Me

Desire and Education

part 3|47 pages

Desire and Voice

chapter 4|23 pages

Knowledge as Bait

Feminism, Voice, and the Pedagogical Unconscious

chapter 6|21 pages

Disturbing Identity and Desire

Adolescent Girls and Wild Words

part 4|52 pages

Desire and Re-Signification

chapter 7|22 pages

Desire and Encryption

A Theory of Readability

part 5|46 pages

Desire and Bodies

chapter 9|19 pages

Beyond the Missionary Position

Teacher Desire and Radical Pedagogy

chapter 10|24 pages

Looking at Pedagogy in 3-D

Rethinking Difference, Disparity, and Desire