ABSTRACT

Passions are high in education, and this edited volume offers bold new ways to conceive of the affective intensities shaping our present historical moment. Concerns over school practices deemed "ineffective," "disruptive," "irrational," or even "promising" are matters modulated by and through feelings, such as, optimism, shame, enhanced concentration, or empathy. The recent turn to affect offers vibrant methodological and theoretical material for an educational present marked by high stakes rhetoric, heated debate, teacher and student vulnerabilities, and extreme educational measures. Affect studies are a part of new materialist and post-humanist turns, and this volume connects these new theoretical directions within education. This comprehensive volume on affect crosses educational subfields and responds to the transdisciplinary interest in thinking through pedagogy, education, and feeling.

This comprehensive reader addresses affect in education from a wide range of styles, topics, and perspectives. This collection offers an introduction to theory, empirical research studies, interviews with affect studies scholars, and an assessment of the current and future significance of affect studies in education. Contributors utilize a range of theoretical and interpretive approaches to thinking with and through schooling phenomena. Interviews with affect scholars in the humanities and social sciences address affective dimensions of teaching. The editors’ introduction, different foci, and interdisciplinary genres of writing help readers feel their ways into what affect studies in education does and might do.

This field-defining collection will be of interest to a range of readers--from graduate students to established scholars--with varying levels of expertise and familiarity putting affect theories to work in education. All the contributions are accessible to those new to the theory, methods, and debates in this vibrant area of educational studies.

part |27 pages

Introduction

part |7 pages

Ordinary Charges

chapter 2|5 pages

Teaching Affectively

part I|47 pages

Politics

chapter 3|15 pages

Passion, Pedagogy, and Pietas

An Interview With Rosi Braidotti

chapter 4|15 pages

The Ethics and Politics of Traumatic Shame

Pedagogical Insights

chapter 5|15 pages

Post-Threat Pedagogies

A Micro-Materialist Phantomatic Feeling within Classrooms in Post-Terrorist Times

part II|56 pages

Pedagogies

chapter 6|7 pages

Affect’s First Lesson

An Interview with Gregory J. Seigworth

chapter 7|14 pages

Resistance Is Useful

Social Justice Teacher Education as an Affective Craft

chapter 8|14 pages

Love and Bewilderment

On Education as Affective Encounter

part III|53 pages

Materials/Bodies

chapter 10|6 pages

Thinking through the Body

An Interview with Anna Hickey Moody

chapter 11|15 pages

The Fecundity of Poo

Working with Children as Pedagogies of Refusal

chapter 12|15 pages

Machinic Affects

Education Data Infrastructure and the Pedagogy of Objects

chapter 13|15 pages

The Affective Matter of (Australian) School Uniforms

The School-Dress That Is and Does

part IV|49 pages

Spaces

chapter 15|20 pages

(Re)storying Water

Decolonial Pedagogies of Relational Affect with Young Children

chapter 16|15 pages

On Learning to Stay in the Room

Notes from the Classroom and Clinic

part |6 pages

Coda