ABSTRACT

The 21st century is steeped in claims to interconnection, technological innovation, and new affective intensities amid challenges to the primacy and centrality of "the human". Flashpoint epistemology attends to the lived difficulties that arise in teaching, policymaking, curriculum, and research among continuous practices of differentiation, and for which there is no pre-existing template for judgment, resolution, or action.

 

Flashpoint Epistemology Volume 2 brings creative sociopolitical research perspectives to flashpoints that emerge amid appeals to globalization, synoptic policy approaches, and new technologies – however defined. The chapters challenge prevailing notions of distance and difference, comparative philosophy, worlding practices, and contact zones. In the remaking of subjects, the unhoming of geopolitics, and new approaches to relationality, youth, and classrooms, complexities in preserving and questioning identity are laid bare and renovated. How technologies challenge and redefine racialization, engendering, and inter/nationalization are examined amid the reworking of oppression, success, well-being, politics, method, and power.

 

The volume will be beneficial for researchers seeking new approaches to education’s complexities, nested discourses, and ever-moving horizons of enactment. It is also a key text for post/graduate students and teachers interested in technological impact, globality, policymaking, and new ways of conducting research in contexts of digitalization and social media.

chapter 1|19 pages

Introduction to the Second Volume

Aporias of Power: Witnessing, Space, and Technology

part |84 pages

Sensory Overload?

chapter 2|21 pages

Analogue-Digital-Image

Shifting Constellations of Time, Bodies, and Pedagogy in the Use of Media Technologies in Latin American Schools

chapter 4|22 pages

Echo Chambers of Oppression

Sound(ed) Understanding and Deep Listening through Sonic Ethnography

chapter 5|21 pages

Flashpoints on “Spaceship Earth”

Historicizing “Global Competence” and “International Understanding” in the American Curriculum of International Education during the 1960s and 1970s *

part |77 pages

Un/homing Geopolitics, Philosophy, and Power

chapter 7|24 pages

The Shifting Space of Success

Well-Being, Gender, and Care around Education Fever within Educational Reform Discourses

chapter 8|17 pages

Flashpoints of an Immediate “Here”

A Genealogy of Locating the Child in Curricular Thought

chapter 9|14 pages

Cracks in the Sidewalk

Looking Behind the Seamless Surfaces of Digital Schooling