ABSTRACT

In this volume, Pinar enacts his theory of curriculum, detailing the relations among knowledge, history, and alterity. The introduction is Pinar’s intellectual life history, naming the contributions he has made to understanding educational experience. Study is the center of educational experience, as he demonstrates in the opening chapter. The alterity of educational experience is evident in his conceptions of disciplinarity and internationalization, interrelated projects of historicization, dialogical encounter, and recontextualization. By reactivating the past, not by instrumentalizing the present, we can find the future, explicated in his studies of the Eight-Year Study, the Tyler Rationale, and the gendering and racialization of U.S. school reform. The interrelation of race and gender is emphasized in the chapters on Ida B. Wells and Jane Addams. The technologization of education is critiqued through analysis of the achievements of George Grant and Pier Paolo Pasolini. The educational project of subjective and social reconstruction is explored through study of Musil’s essayism, a genre that corrects the problems accompanying ethnography and created by identity politics.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction 1

chapter |14 pages

Study

chapter |11 pages

Allegory

chapter |11 pages

Internationalization

chapter |17 pages

Nationalism

chapter |22 pages

Technology

chapter |13 pages

Reform

chapter |10 pages

Misrepresentation

chapter |17 pages

Conversation

chapter |11 pages

Place

chapter |15 pages

Emergence 1

chapter |12 pages

Alterity

chapter |10 pages

Discipline

chapter |6 pages

Identity

chapter |8 pages

Resolve

chapter |13 pages

Decolonization

chapter |13 pages

Inwardness

chapter |15 pages

Individuality

chapter |15 pages

Cosmopolitanism

chapter |2 pages

Epilogue