ABSTRACT

The idea that teachers love children is often taken for granted in education. Rarely is the idea of love itself examined. Bringing together the work of educators, curriculum theorists and clinical psychoanalysts, and drawing upon autobiographical and narrative case studies, this groundbreaking collection examines the collision of love and learning, including the ways in which such intersections are provoked, repressed and denied. Contributors turn to psychoanalysis to explore questions of love in all of its varying permutations - ambivalence, sexuality, hatred, desire, projection, and loss - in order to demonstrate how the social ramifications of such work is critical to the ways teachers are currently being prepared for life in the classroom.

chapter |3 pages

The Interludes

An Introduction to Reading and Using This Book

part |48 pages

Scenes of Love and Control

chapter |28 pages

Savage Inequalities Indeed

Irrationality and Urban School Reform

part |45 pages

Scenes from the Black Couch

chapter |22 pages

On the Vicissitudes of Love and Hate

Anne Sexton's Pedagogy of Loss and Reparation

part |54 pages

The Painful Politics of Love and History

part |42 pages

The Child's Question

chapter |20 pages

Sigmund Freud, Melanie Klein, and Little Oedipus

On the Pleasures and Disappointments of Sexual Enlightenment

chapter |18 pages

On Knowing and Desiring Children

The Significance of the Unthought Known

part |63 pages

Curriculum and the Erotics of Learning

chapter |19 pages

Romantic Research

Why We Love to Read

chapter |23 pages

Love in the Classroom

Desire and Transference in Learning and Teaching